Mika Yokota // Your God Once Looked Like You

February 11th - 25th, 2023

This collection of work is created in collaboration with the spirits. The goal of this exhibition is to create a space where the matrilineal ancestors reveal themselves and offer antidotal wisdom through music, ritual, embodiment practices and community care. By connecting pathways to one’s ancestors, the hope is to bring viewers a sense of belonging after generations of displacement, oppression, colonialism and the ongoing rippling consequences of cultural wounding. This project is in devotion to the ways in which Asians can be made more legible as human outside of tragedy and acts of service. 

Your God Once Looked Like You explores the theme of reclaiming the cultural landscape of the East Asian American diaspora through the lens of an ancestorial matriarchy. This project seeks out the reclamation of the femme intuition and the access to erotic bodily knowledge as guiding sources. Yokota honors the use of the sensual, physical, emotional and psychic expressions that exists in each of us to inform life pursuits that bring us the most joy and fulfillment. Yokota seeks to ask what are the visual and somatic clues that your body is being conquered, and in what ways can we reach the euphoric? 

Mika Yokota
I’ll Hold Your Wounds

 

Installation Images

Coming Soon….

Installation Images by

 

About the Artist

Mika Yokota

Mika Yokota

Mika Yokota (b. 1985, Kyoto, Japan) is a Japanese-American immigrant living and working in Los Angeles. She studied illustration and painting at Art Center College of Design and is currently pursuing a Masters of Fine Arts at Otis College of Art and Design.

Mika has worked experimentally across genres including drawing, painting, printmaking, ceramics, music, and performance art. In her printmaking and paintings, figures and symbols tumble together to discover what it means to reclaim the femme intuition and the access to bodily knowledge as a guiding source. Music and ceremony are explored to thin the veil between this world and ancestral spirits. Her work offers discourse on East Asian diaspora and the ways in which Asians can be made more legible as human in Western society.

Previously, Mika studied for two years as a printmaking artist-in-residence at the Kala Art Institute in Berkeley, CA. Her work has been shown at the Kala Art Gallery, Judson Gallery, Athens B Gallery, The Gallalery, Proxy Place Gallery, Berkeley Civic Arts Center and a permanent mural resides at the Meta Headquarters.

 
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