Echoes #5
¥180,000($1,134.00)
残り1点
International shipping available
外貨での金額表記は目安となっております。実際には日本円で決済されますので、ご了承ください。
《 Artwork Details 》
Title: 「Echoes #5」
Date: February 23, 2026
Size: F6 (31.8 cm × 41 cm)
Medium: Mixed Media (Ink, Paper, Resin) on Wood Panel
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《 Concept / About the Work 》
Echoes —
A portrait shaped by the voices of others.
This work is part of a series created using real comments collected from social media.
Each fragment of text embedded within the canvas represents a voice — preserved, layered, and transformed into a visual form.
Up close, the piece reveals a dense accumulation of words, emotions, and traces of communication.
From a distance, these countless fragments merge into a single, unified image.
In our daily lives, we are constantly surrounded by voices — praise, empathy, misunderstanding, and sometimes even negativity.
Rather than treating these as noise, this work recognizes them as elements that inevitably shape who we are.
Through the process of collecting, dissolving, reconstructing, and sealing these voices into the surface, the artwork transforms intangible communication into a physical presence.
Echoes explores the idea that identity is not formed in isolation, but emerges through the accumulation of interactions over time.
This series reflects the act of accepting, confronting, and ultimately integrating the voices that surround us — turning them into a tangible image of self.
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《 Specifications & Notes 》
• Hand-signed on the back
• Ready to hang
• Original one-of-a-kind artwork
• Colors may vary slightly from photos due to lighting conditions
• Returns are not accepted unless the item is defective
• Please avoid displaying in direct sunlight to prevent deterioration
Each piece is carefully prepared for shipment✈️
Please allow approximately 1–2 weeks for processing and dispatch.
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《 About Mirra Takayanagi 》
Mirra Takayanagi is a Japanese artist who transforms social media comments into physical artworks.
After deciding to pursue his childhood dream of becoming an artist shortly before turning thirty, he began developing his practice independently without formal art education.
Through an experimental process of dissolving printed comments, reconstructing their fibers, and embedding them into layered surfaces, he explores how digital communication can be translated into material form.
His work investigates the relationship between identity, perception, and the collective voices that shape our existence.
