Tuesday 22 September 2020

Night Scenes,

from Japan,


all images Yukino Ohmura, above  Shinjuku (2019),

for over 10 years Japanese artist Yukino Ohmura has been creating dazzling nightscapes of Tokyo, Osaka and other major Asian cities, above Shanghai (2015),

since graduating from art school in 2013, Ohmura has not only been creating her own art but has been traveling domestically and internationally, staging workshops, above Yokohama (2020),

Abeno Harukas, Japan’s tallest skyscraper, in Osaka (2015),

Osaka (2020),

Shibuya Station in the 1970s (left) and today (right, 2020), at first glance you might think that they are photographs or paintings, but they are in fact made of commercially available stickers,

just like these, Ohmura uses generic dot stickers available from most stationery stores. They come in a variety of colors and sizes. For those looking to try their hand at sticker art, Ohmura has created a starter kit that she sells online (Japanese only), as it turns out, these circular dot stickers are perfect for illustrating the nighttime blur, a photographic technique known as bokeh that coincidentally originates from the Japanese word meaning blur. With an eye for framing and composition, Ohmura skillfully lays out thousands of these dots to create mesmerizing nightscapes. For those in Tokyo right now, Ohmura’s work is part of a group exhibition at Daikanyama Hillside Terrace (on view through 9/27/2020), You can see more of her artwork on her tumblr site, You can keep up with her on Instagram and Twitter,

all of these from little tiny round stickers, amazing.


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