The Unknown and Its Poetics

$25.00

Catalogue for exhibition taking place at KinoSaito | 24 May – 21 December 2025

The Unknown and Its Poetics curated by Adrián S. Bará presents a group of works by international artists that live or have lived away from their home country and have been impacted by cross-cultural influences. Artists whose abstract work engages experiences and identities related to the unknown and the construction of home.

As the Italian painter Giorgio Morandi once said, “Nothing is more abstract than reality.” The group of artists included in this survey share the ability to communicate the importance of the small poetic gesture, and explore what we call reality through the language of abstraction.

With works in a range of media, this exhibition will span throughout the art center and will address relationships between cultures, languages, political systems, life under globalization, individuality and liberation.

Catalogue for exhibition taking place at KinoSaito | 24 May – 21 December 2025

The Unknown and Its Poetics curated by Adrián S. Bará presents a group of works by international artists that live or have lived away from their home country and have been impacted by cross-cultural influences. Artists whose abstract work engages experiences and identities related to the unknown and the construction of home.

As the Italian painter Giorgio Morandi once said, “Nothing is more abstract than reality.” The group of artists included in this survey share the ability to communicate the importance of the small poetic gesture, and explore what we call reality through the language of abstraction.

With works in a range of media, this exhibition will span throughout the art center and will address relationships between cultures, languages, political systems, life under globalization, individuality and liberation.

Kikuo Saito was born in Tokyo in 1939 and at age twenty-two apprenticed under an established Japanese master painter while also absorbing the many new art movements emerging in Japan, Europe and the U.S. After a brief time working in lighting and stage design in Japan, he moved to New York in 1966, when radical thinking and new modes of expression in both painting and performance had introduced an era of bold experimentation in the arts. Kikuo explored the free, expressive pouring and dragging of paint across canvas then the purview of Color Field painters but soon found a vocabulary of his own in compositions of gestural brushstrokes, cryptic signs, letter forms, loose geometric shapes, and washes of color, at times bold and intense and, at other times, veil-like and mysterious.

In those early New York years, he found a home at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club where he designed sets, costumes, lighting and props and developed theater productions that blended qualities of the Japanese avant-garde with his own spare aesthetic. He went on to work with noted theater directors Robert Wilson and Jerome Robbins on both national and international productions. He took painting classes at the Art Students League, where he would later teach, and encountered the work of many of the era’s innovators. Soon he was working in the studios of such notable painters as Larry Poons, Kenneth Noland and Helen Frankenthaler. For many years, Saito worked back and forth between theater and painting, the graceful movement, concise forms, and lighting qualities of the former greatly influencing the latter, and vice versa. Eventually, he turned solely to his studio practice where he honed his sophisticated compositions full of motifs and signs both real and imaginary, and his bold, unexpected use of color.

Through his teaching and in his studio, Saito supported and mentored a wide array of creative thinkers, many of whom today continue their practice in painting, writing, architecture and design.