The Animal We Carry
Artists
Kai Yoda
Press release
Bremond Capela is pleased to present "The Animal We Carry," Kai Yoda's first solo exhibition in France. The exhibition marks an important moment in Kai Yoda's trajectory. After ten years of working within the duo Ittah Yoda, this solo presentation opens a new chapter. Here, Kai Yoda shifts his gaze toward a more interior dimension. The exhibition explores an intimate zone, where desires, instincts, and sensations emerge before we are even able to name them. Kai Yoda's work arises from a dialogue between several ways of producing images. His oil paintings on linen are not fixed images. Rather, they appear as surfaces in transformation. Built up in layers, they move between traditional painting and contemporary tools, including artificial intelligence. The artist uses AI to bring forth unexpected colors, patterns, or images. Yet his work deliberately distances itself from an overly smooth digital aesthetic. Instead, he seeks to reveal traces of accident, fragility, imperfection, and matter. The figure is never entirely stable. It seems to appear, disappear, and then reform. Each painting gives visible form to a presence that is more difficult to grasp: a tension, an energy, a sensation made physical through painting. The experience of the exhibition extends beyond the space of the canvas. Kai Yoda uses materials such as leather, beeswax, wood, and brass, notably in the works "Samuel" and "Daniel." The leather elements are developed in collaboration with Marie-Ève Lecavalier and exist between garment, sculpture, and painting. These materials create a more physical relationship to the works. They appeal to touch, smell, and the body's memory. They also carry a material history. The leather comes from existing stocks. The pigments are largely made by hand from natural pigments, beeswax, and linseed oil. Some canvases are reused and repainted. The wood is dead wood collected in Vassivière, where the artist previously presented his work. This attention to materials extends a reflection on the relationships between human, animal, nature, and technology. Working as closely as possible with local materials, artisans, and collaborators connected to each project, Kai Yoda approaches ecology as a way of thinking through interdependence rather than as an illustrated subject. In a world where images can be generated with increasing ease, the exhibition returns to what remains profoundly human: intimacy, contact, imperfection, and the memory of the body. This desire to involve the visitor continues during the opening, and at several moments throughout the exhibition, through a tasting ritual conceived by the artist. With the participation of chef Megumi Takeyama, small bites are offered to visitors as an extension of the exhibition itself. This is not a performance in the classical sense. Rather, it is a ritualized moment in which eating becomes a way of bringing the work into oneself through taste and smell. Leather pieces, developed in collaboration with Marie-Ève Lecavalier, extend this experience into a more embodied form, existing between garment, sculpture, and painting. The visitor then becomes one of the triggers of the installation. The exhibition leaves behind the usual distance of looking and becomes a process of sharing and incorporation. The works are organized around a gallery of presences identified by first names: "Adam," "Augustine," and "Viktor." These names do not refer to specific portraits. Rather, they designate mental, physical, or emotional figures. The bodies are often fragmented or in a state of dissolution. They evoke a tension of the flesh that might be associated with Francis Bacon. Yet here, this tension unfolds within a more silent and restrained atmosphere, close to the pared-down clarity of Isamu Noguchi. Rather than telling a story, Kai Yoda creates an environment of coexistence. The natural and the fabricated, the constructed and the instinctive, the living and the artificial ultimately come together. The exhibition makes visible a fragile zone of contact, where the human and the animal, the gaze and sensation, begin to merge. Kai Yoda (born in 1985 in Tokyo) lives and works between Paris, London, Tokyo, and Stockholm. Trained at Keio University in Tokyo and the Royal College of Art in London, he co-founded the duo Ittah Yoda in 2015 before initiating his solo practice in 2024. His work has been presented at institutions including the Palais de Tokyo, the CIAP on Vassivière Island, and Château La Coste. His works are held in the collections of the FRAC Pays de la Loire, the FRAC Artothèque Nouvelle-Aquitaine, and the Sigg Art Foundation. Collaborations: The exhibition was developed with the contribution of Megumi Takeyama, chef; CVNSUMED, sound; and David Chieze, scent. All works involving leather were developed in collaboration with Marie-Ève Lecavalier.
- Through
- 25 July 2026
- Venue
- Bremond Capela
- Address
- 13 rue Béranger
75003 Paris
- Hours
- Tue - Sat 11am–7pm
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