Eclosion, Origin |
Solo Show @ Ceramic Brussels 2026
Shinya Tanoue
22nd of January 2026 - 25th of January 2026
Tour & Taxis, Brussels
Origin, Eclosion presents a solo exhibition by Kyoto-based Japanese ceramic artist Shinya Tanoue, whose sculptural practice explores notions of emergence, protection, and transformation. Rooted in a culture attentive to cycles of nature and quiet metamorphosis, Tanoue’s work unfolds at the threshold between concealment and revelation, where form becomes a state of being rather than a fixed object.
Recurring shell-like volumes run through Tanoue’s oeuvre, evoking natural enclosures — seeds, cocoons, wombs — spaces of incubation where life gathers before its emergence. These forms do not seek to represent life itself, but to hold its moment of becoming. Each sculpture exists in a fragile balance, between inside and outside, interior and exterior, birth and rebirth.
For Ceramic Brussels 2026, AIFA presents a new body of works by Tanoue, including lacquer-coated ceramic sculptures (urushi), where mineral surfaces, subtle luminosity, and organic volumes converge. The layered finishes and restrained palette invite close, contemplative viewing, revealing a quiet intensity shaped by time, gesture, and material sensitivity.
This presentation also marks a significant moment in the artist’s practice. For the first time, Shinya Tanoue introduces hanging wall works, exhibited exclusively by AIFA at Ceramic Brussels 2026. These new works extend his sculptural language into the architectural space, reinforcing the notion of threshold and expanding the dialogue between object, surface, and environment.
Through Origin, Eclosion, Tanoue offers a meditation on impermanence and continuity, where growth remains incomplete, fragile, and ongoing. The works invite viewers to slow down, to dwell within subtle transitions, and to encounter form as a living process rather than a resolved statement.
AIFA’s Duo Show, Surface and Silence, affirms that beauty lies not in perfection but in transformation. Both Marie Higashi and Kansai Noguchi carry forward Japanese cultural values of impermanence, subtlety, and silence into the global present, creating works that are at once intimate, timeless, and profoundly contemporary.



