forever forest upper field (2nd edition)

Contributors

Setsuko Adachi, Michael Kearney, Lim Lee Ching

Description

Incisive and loving at the same time, Forever Forest Upper Field paints a portrait of Japan from a perspective that, like the elephant in the room, is almost never breached nor openly admitted, but rather felt through the bodies of the haunting and unnamed characters traversing through the lonely landscapes and vacant city squares in the prose-sketches, full of human warmth in the pockets of spaces remaining where the governing forces have not yet rendered them lifeless, glowing in the deep of the night, that read like the voice of a lighthouse in the uncomfortable silence.

Blurbs

‘The poet must not avert his eyes’, Werner Herzog continues to scream at us. Both Setsuko Adachi and Michael Kearney not only refuse to turn away, to look elsewhere, they — unfazed with what lies in front of them — never even blink. And not only do they ‘see everything, read everything’, they make works in response to it.

Kearney both zooms in and out simultaneously, elongating time itself, making us contemplate what should be familiar to the point it becomes strange again.

And Setsuko, oh Setsuko, her words not only open worlds for us — to a Japan that unflinching stares back (beware the abyss) — they open us to a language, her language (Adachinese), which writes itself into you, henceforth never letting you see the world in the same way again. Read her with care; mostly because after Setsuko Adachi you might not be able to read and see without caring again.

~ Jeremy Fernando

Setsuko Adachi writes a rhythmic prose that steps across the pages to remind us of the inherent beauty of a way to use the language that can at once be universal and specific. It raises a unique voice that is simultaneously foreign but also recognisably naturalised — much like the webs of metropolitan thoroughfares that she describes and brings to life. Michael Kearney’s artworks, which converse with Adachi’s stories, further intensify their energy, provide the syncopations that befit the expansive story-telling. The images, narrating an extended vista, draw us deeper into an aesthetic that is not beyond subsuming the dystopic purely for the purpose of creating a better art, both visual and verbal.

~ Lim Lee Ching

Fishpond SG
Amazon UK
Amazon
Waterstones
Barnes & Noble
Amazon JP
Previous
Previous

Welcome Center

Next
Next

undulations