GR gallery is pleased to announce Keikai, a solo exhibition by Shoko Nakazawa, marking the artist’s debut with the gallery. The exhibition invites visitors into the vibrant world of the Japanese artist, presenting a suite of new works, including oil paintings, drawings and hand painted polystone sculptures. The series is inspired by Shoko signature Kaiju characters, rendered in a new bright, shock-fluo color palette for this occasion.

From an early age, Nakazawa developed a fascination with insects, fantastical creatures, and monsters. Her visual universe merges cuteness and ferocity, featuring pastel-colored monsters that evoke a world where fear turns playful.

Through her work, she explores the emotional and captivating side of Kaiju, transforming the notion of “monster” into a friendly and symbolic creature, balanced between pop art and ecological narrative.

Nakazawa’s compositions exist in a timeless realm, evoking a sense of nostalgia. They are traditionally executed in a vintage style, characterized by textured discoloration and populated by cheerful yet melancholic young girls alongside mysterious, recurring creatures that often interact with one another. These figures are Nakazawa’s own interpretation of kaiju—the “strange beasts” of Japanese culture and mythology, known from the science fiction genre that includes icons like Godzilla and King Kong. Specifically, they include Byron, the giant salamander; Seedlas Brother, the pre-evolution form of Byron; and Tokke, the gecko monster. Together, they embody a fusion of decadence, desire, and entropy, balanced through their symbiosis with nature.

For Keikai, Shoko Nakazawa shifted her focus primarily to these characters and, as the title suggests, adopted a particularly vivid and intense palette—one that mirrors the disquiet of our times.