Aki Kuroda is a Japanese painter and sculptor. Noticed for his silhouettes and monochrome paintings, he surprises through the richness of his creation.
Background
Aki Kuroda was born on October 4, 1944, in Kyoto, Kyōto Prefecture, Kansai, Japan. He was raised in a family that was very open to European culture. he was the only child. His father was a professor of economics at Doshisha University. His cousin was one of the first cubist painters in Japan.
Career
After several trips to France, Aki Kuroda settled in Paris in 1970. His first solo exhibition was held in 1978 in Germany. In 1980, he was selected for the 11th Biennale de Paris and in 1994 for the Sao Paulo Biennial. He had numerous solo exhibitions in Europe, Japan, Brazil, United States, China, including at the National Museum of Bratislava in 1992 or the National Museums of Modern Art in Tokyo and Osaka in 1993 /1994.
Since 1992, parallel to his painting, Aki Kuroda began creating performances that mix different art forms. He also collaborates with famous personalities of the artistic world, like Angelin Preljocaj (Parade, Opéra de Paris and Avignon Festival in 1993) or architects -- Tadao Ando and Richard Rogers in Japan.
Aki also worked for several public and private commissions, like murals for the Pôle Universitaire Léonard de Vinci, the Cultural House of Japan in Paris, the coffee shop in the Musée d'Art Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg, the City of Paris and many others. Aki Kuroda is also closely linked to the literary community. In 1985, he edited the "Noise", a newspaper that involved, among others, Jacques Derrida and Michel Serres.