Overview
Born in Hiroshima, Japan, Zero Higashida graduated from the Nihon University College of Art in 1984 and later the Tokyo University of Music and Fine Art in 1986. He attended the Studio School of New York in 1988, and received the Hiroshima Scholarship shortly thereafter in 1992. His mother having survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Higashida makes a point of addressing the catastrophe as an event that has indelibly altered the course of human history. Higashida’s simple forms, both rough and gestural, suggest the massive and the infinitesimal at the same time. They reflect at once the beauty, elegance, and harmony of balance, and the suspension of the atom and its relation to the universe. Utilizing steel, stainless steel, stones, and pieces of wood indigenous to Hiroshima, his surfaces ache with ragged edges, and suture-like wounds slice the planes. Favoring a state of precarious equilibrium, he tends to balance his forms on beveled edges and sharp points. Although haunted by the spectre of the atomic bomb, Higashida’s art also embodies, according to art critic Gerard Haggerty, the Japanese notion of chiritori: the planet’s power to heal and restore itself; as well as iconographic suggestions of important and influential individuals in the arts.
Selected Solo Exhibitions
2010 Kouros Gallery, New York
1997 Kouros Gallery, New York
1997 Kouros Sculpture Center, Ridgefield, CT
1995 Fukuya Gallery, Tokyo
1995 Atogayama Gallery, Tokyo
1995 Hiroshima Museum of Fine Art, Japan
1994 Kouros Gallery, New York
1992 Philippe Staib Gallery, Kent Station, CT
1991 Philippe Staib Gallery, New York
1985 Fusoh Gallery, Ginza, Japan
1984 Chibah City Exposition, Japan
1982 Namiki Gallery, Tokyo
Selected Group Exhibitions
1994 Zero Higashida/Wendy Mark, 8 Greene Street, New York
1993 Art from New York: Leslie Dill, Steffi Frank, Zero Higashida, Wendy Mark, Lee Tribe and Leslie Wayne, Hiroshima Museum of Fine Art, Hiroshima, Japan
1990 Steel and Wood: Ruth Hardiger, Zero Higashida, Ludwika Ogorzelec, Lee Tribe and William Tucker, Philippe Staib Gallery, New York
1990 An Exhibit of Progressive Artists Working in the Industrialized World, Gallerie II Gallery, Houston, Texas
1990 Annual Lakeshore Outdoor Sculpture Exposition, Chicago, Illinois
1990 Sooner or Later: Edward Albee’s Eye, Hillwood Art Museum, Brookville, New York
1986 Japanese Gallery Association Exhibition, Central Gallery, Ginza, Japan