March 20, 2025
Masamitsu Shigeta
Perspectives
Tyler Park Presents
February 15 - March 29, 2025

Masamitsu Shigeta
Masamitsu Shigeta is a New York based artist who turns banal and everyday surroundings into evocative paintings that inspire viewers to reflect on and take a second look at what they might otherwise pass by. For his previous exhibition at Tyler Park Presents in 2022, Shigeta created impressions of buildings and trees he happened upon while walking around New York City. In these paintings, he captured the interplay between nature and architecture, depicting trees surrounded by fences as anomalies in the urban landscape. Each painting was also framed in a way that enhanced some aspect of the image.
For Perspectives, Shigeta once again takes on the role of urban wanderer. Like Baudelaire's flaneur, Shigeta is a thoughtful and astute observer who navigates the city. Shigeta's grouping of modest sized oils includes impressions of Los Angeles, New York, Tokyo, Thailand, Hong Kong and Zurich. As in past exhibitions, each work is surrounded by a hand made frame that parallels an element within the scene. The painting A Snail (2024) is bordered by a light brown wooden rectangle with curved corners that wraps the canvas. This frame mirrors the rounded brown shell around a small snail depicted in the lower half of the composition. The focal point of the nighttime scene is this lone snail crawling across an empty city sidewalk illuminated by street lights and surrounded by large green trees.
A Broom Tree (2024) is a blue hued painting of the top portion of two palm trees in front of three modernist buildings with glass facades. The closer tree has five magnificent fronds branching out in all directions. The painting is bordered by the wide bottoms of four push brooms, their texture corresponding to the fronds. Palm trees also appear in three other works (all 2025) where Shigeta also focuses on their surroundings. In A Palm Tree in a Cell, the tree is seen through a chain link fence. One large section of the fence is centered in the composition through which Shigeta portrays an empty playground and further back a street lined with trees depicted as a succession of green and orange brush strokes. A similar scene appears in the larger work, Diamond (2025). Here, the chain link fence appears more as a flat black and gray cartoony illustration. It frames a receding suburban street with a cloud filled sky and greenery that recedes into the distance. This work is surrounded by a light gray enamel frame etched with a chainlink pattern.
Looking Up A Tree (2024) is a playful cityscape where Shigeta centers a single tree seen from below. The skyscrapers and sky surround the circular shape of the treetop which is accentuated by an extremely wide rounded frame wrapped in a black knit sweater. Another work where the frame stands out is Log 3 (2024). In this painting, Shigeta depicts the end of a pile of logs from a foreshortened perspective illustrating the rings in green and orange stripes. As the image recedes into the distance, the background is filled with a light yellow sky, green hued trees and a light blue-gray house. A bright orange frame in a pattern of half circles surrounds the painting, paralleling the orange of the log's rings.
While Shigeta's painting style is expressive and descriptive, his palette is realistic without being exacting. In these captivating works, it feels like he is capturing a fleeting moment and filling it with admiration, as if to say: look up, look down and see what I see. What stands out in these charming and innovative works is the way that Shigeta transforms banal aspects of the natural and urban environment. These instances are framed as unique perspectives and filled with just enough texture, color and detail to remake the ordinary into something highly significant.
Click here for Masamitsu Shigeta on its own page.