Gallery Kiyooka Sumiko 1998 | 2026 |

Not a comfortable exhibition. Not a beautiful one. But necessary. ★★★★☆ (lost half a star only for the unforgivable lack of benches—my knees still ache.) If you’d like, I can also create a fictional artist biography for Kiyooka Sumiko, or describe the actual works in the “Folding Series” as if for a museum catalog.

Tokyo Art Observer , Issue 44 (Winter 1999 – Rediscovered Draft) Gallery Kiyooka Sumiko 1998

The gallery, tucked behind a Shinjuku love hotel turned boutique, was barely 40 tsubo . Yet Sumiko transformed it into a meditation on the year’s unspoken anxieties: the jobless freeter , the aging of the postwar generation, the glitch of analog memory. Curator Ishida Taro described it as “kintsugi for the soul’s hard drive.” Not a comfortable exhibition

To step into Gallery Kiyooka in the autumn of 1998 was to step into a wabi-sabi fever dream—just as the economic bubble’s last colors faded from Tokyo’s corporate lobbies. Sumiko’s show was not a roar but a deliberate, devastating whisper. ★★★★☆ (lost half a star only for the

Sumiko abandoned her earlier, celebrated nihonga florals. Instead, she presented the “Folding Series” — large sheets of handmade kōzo paper, folded thousands of times into geometric origami cranes, then unfolded and mounted. The creases trapped 1998’s particulates: dust from a pachinko parlor, ash from a student’s burned résumé, even a single dried konbu strand from her mother’s obentō .

The Whisper of Folding Time: Revisiting Kiyooka Sumiko’s 1998 Tokyo Retrospective