Motoyuki Daifu

Motoyuki Daifu
To artist biography

Motoyuki Daifu

Which art books, prints and posters are available by and about this artist? Here is a sample of items of interest to a typical collector:

Third volume of the Gould collection.

Still Life, is an extension of Daifu's Project Family. In this installment, the family home is a dramatic stage, and the dinner table is Daifu’s muse: a hectic disarray of mom’s cooking, groceries, vivid product packaging, and the spectrum of anonymous objects forgotten in the course of quotidian life. This discordant ensemble is the physical embodiment of daily familial dissonance, illuminated in sharp relief with flash, shot from above. The convoluted array of geometric colors overwhelms the viewer before we are drawn back to banal reality by the expiration dates stuck to plastic supermarket food containers. In this way, images of the dinner table become a new form of still life, documenting the Japanese symbiosis of order and chaos with a diarist’s touch.

Still Life was presented in solo exhibition at Tokyo contemporary art gallery Misako & Rosen in November 2014.

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Motoyuki Daifu, Japanese, b. 1985

Thematically, Daifu’s work is an extended examination of private life, presented with a humorous touch that disrupts conventional photographic contexts. From the triangular relationship formed with a former girlfriend and her son depicted in Lovesody, to the chaotic home environment of his own family seen in Project Family, his photographs offer an objective vantage point on extremely intimate subjects, further enriched by an editorial flair that results in sublime personal narrative.

With numerous publications including the photobooks Lovesody (Little Big Man Books, 2012) and Project Family (Dashwood Books, 2013), he enjoys a notable following on the international stage: his multifaceted corpus garnered a nomination for the Prix Pictet in 2014.