Gripping paintbrush and crayon, the artist known as Thumbelina splodges and splats with merry abandon, the one-year-old star of a Tokyo exhibition that goes on way past her bedtime.
Abstract paintings by the toddler are on sale for 33,000 yen (US$230/RM1,013) at her debut show at hip gallery Decameron, tucked above a bar in the Kabukicho red-light district.
Thumbelina’s vivid style is “babyish but mysteriously dexterous”, gallery director – and matchmaker of her parents – Dan Isomura said.
“I thought, ‘wow, these are legit artworks’,” Isomura said, describing his first impression of her free-form creations.
Colourful smudges adorn tatami mats and tables at the 21-month-old’s suburban home, where her mother patiently helps twist open paint tubes and squeeze them onto paper.
“I can see this rhythm in her movements and patterns … she knows what she’s doing,” said the evacuee from Ukraine in her 20s, asking to remain anonymous for privacy reasons.
After Russia’s 2022 invasion, Thumbelina’s mother, an artist, fled eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region for Japan. Photo: AFP
As a fellow artist focusing on Japanese calligraphy, she is “jealous” of her daughter’s first solo exhibition, she joked, although of course “I’m happy, as a mum”.
Once she thought her daughter might help her with work, but now “I’m her assistant”.
Like Cupid
After Russia invaded in 2022, Thumbelina’s mother left Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region – her “very pathological, violent” homeland torn apart by war.
She found herself on a plane to Japan, having consulted a website helping Ukrainians find housing worldwide.
A chance seating beside contemporary artist Isomura, who had only boarded due to two delayed flights, changed her life.
Amazed to learn they were both artists, the pair kept in touch, and later, through Isomura’s introduction, she met her future husband.
“Dan is our angel, you know, like Cupid,” she said.
The couple then had Thumbelina – not her real name – whose paintings inspired 32-year-old Isomura.
Thumbelina splodges and splats with merry abandon as she paints in the family’s home in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
At first he had assumed the toddler was “scribbling randomly, like she was playing in the mud”.
But when he saw Thumbelina in action, “she seemed to signal each time she considered her drawing complete,” prompting her mother to give her a fresh sheet.
The fact that Thumbelina sometimes demands a specific colour, develops shapes from paint droplets and finishes voluntarily suggests a will at work, he said.
“Some may say her mother’s involvement means these are not Thumbelina’s works,” Isomura said.
But “for a baby, a mother is part of their body”.
Young creative mindset
In any case, adult artists aren’t fully independent, Isomura argues, as they rarely break free of store-bought paints or conventional canvases.
“We operate under the illusion of solitary creation, while in fact we rely heavily on systems built by others,” he said.
Abstract paintings by the toddler are selling for RM1,013 at her debut show at Decameron, a hip gallery above a bar in Kabukicho’s red-light district in Tokyo. Photo: AFP
The exhibition, Isomura’s first as director of Decameron, opened last month and runs until mid-May.
But most of the time it’s on, from 8pm until 5am, Thumbelina will likely be fast asleep.
One recent night at the gallery, an admiring visitor said the paintings had an innocent charm.
“We instinctively try to draw skillfully” because “we’ve grown used to having our paintings evaluated by others”, said 45-year-old Yuri Kuroda.
“But it feels like she doesn’t care at all about whether it’s good or bad … It’s a mindset we can never return to.”
So would she pay US$230 to take one home?
“I’m tempted,” Kuroda chuckled. – AFP
AloJapan.com