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White Cube now represents Yoko Matsumoto

Yoko Matsumoto © On White Wall, courtesy White Cube.

White Cube now represents Yoko Matsumoto (b.1936, Tokyo), alongside Hino Gallery in Japan. In February, the artist’s painting Edom Becomes Wilderness (1989) will be on view at White Cube’s booth during MAZE Art Gstaad in Switzerland, while Shapes in Nature VI (1986) will be shown at Frieze Los Angeles.

Matsumoto joins the gallery following her UK debut at White Cube Mason’s Yard, London, in January 2024, and a presentation at White Cube New York in June 2024. In spring 2026, the artist will have a major touring retrospective across several Japanese institutions.

Matsumoto’s expressive visual language is dedicated to ‘painting with colour and form alone’. Inspired by Western abstraction and Japanese art, in particular the monochromatic ink drawing practice of suiboku-ga, the artist addresses colour in a processual and meditative manner, with a rigorous use of light, shade and hue. Born in 1936 in Tokyo, where she continues to live and work, Matsumoto graduated in oil painting from Tokyo University of the Arts in 1960. After a trip to New York in 1967, she became profoundly influenced by the second generation of American Abstract Expressionists and Colour Field painters, such as Morris Louis, Helen Frankenthaler and Mark Rothko, and discovered materials unavailable in Japan: acrylic paint (Liquitex), a gloss-polymer medium and raw cotton canvas. Over the next decade, Matsumoto would develop her signature ‘hazy’ style of painting, characterised by thin layers of acrylic pigment and gestural marks, created by way of a physically demanding technique working on the floor during deep periods of concentration.


Yoko Matsumoto, Rock Flower, 1993 Acrylic on canvas 194 x 260 cm | 76 3/8 x 102 3/8 in. © the artist. Photo © White Cube (Theo Christelis)

The artist introduced her best-known pink hues in the 1970s, a colour which she believes resides ‘beneath inexpressible thought’ and has remained at the centre of her practice for over three decades. Matsumoto has continuously explored new colour palettes and techniques, notably incorporating vibrant greens into her later compositions, as well as returning to painting with oil while standing in the early 2000s, when the physical demands of working with acrylics on the floor became too great.Throughout her 60 year career, Matsumoto’s intuitive approach has resulted in works that transcend traditional representation, embracing accidental and miraculous formations of colour. 

Irene Bradbury, Senior Director, Artist Liaison at White Cube: 

‘We are thrilled that Yoko Matsumoto, a highly respected gestural master in colour and form will join White Cube’s roster. Yoko’s paintings have been widely exhibited and collected by institutions throughout Japan, including The National Art Center in Tokyo; The National Museum of Modern Art in Kamakura; The National Museum of Art in Osaka; and the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, where I first encountered her work. To mark Yoko’s 90th birthday, there will be a major survey exhibition celebrating her extensive career touring across Japan.

Following the positive response to her first exhibition in the UK at our Mason’s Yard gallery, and her momentous return to New York having not shown there for almost 30 years, we are excited to introduce Yoko’s work to international audiences. To kick that off, we will be presenting two of her classic ‘Pink’ paintings at the upcoming MAZE Gstaad Art in Switzerland and Frieze Los Angeles next month.’

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