SELECTED WORKS BY Sohei Nishino
Sohei Nishino
Diorama Of New York
2009
Light jet print
172.2 x 134 cm
Cities, like dreams, are made of desires and fears, even if the thread of their discourse is secret, their rules are absurd, their perspectives deceitful, and everything conceals something else.â Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities
Sohei Nishino
Diorama Of Paris
2009
Light jet print
135 x 156 cm
If there were a presiding spirit over Nishinoâs dioramas, it would have to be Italo Calvinoâs Marco Polo, guiding us through Invisible Cities where the imagination takes over the job of urban planning from the rational architects and administrators. If anything, we are over-mapped today. Anyone with a screen can in a matter of seconds hone in on a country, a city, a street, a house, a doorway. Itâs magic of a kind, I suppose, but then why does it so quickly wear off? Where is the wonder we feel when looking at medieval maps, when cartographers felt justified in filling terra incognita with imaginary islands and two headed-men?
Sohei Nishino
Diorama Of Tokyo
2009
Light jet print
136.5 x 137 cm
Nishino reinvests cities with wonder (and not incidentally cites 18th-century cartographer InĆ Tadataka, who also did his surveys on foot, as an influence). Streets bustle, buildings tilt and sway (perhaps only an earthquake-sensitive Japanese could portray cities perched so precariously on the Earth). The old Cubists would have adored these maps: we look up while looking down; we look down⊠and see the sky. Nishinoâs giddy maps remind us that cities, for all their giddy chaos, are at the core miraculous human achievements.
Text by William A Ewing