Sakura Maku
I paint as though I’m cooking or driving. I map out directions
and make different types of color-coded drawings that plan
and predict what the thing might look like, all the while
anticipating the final outcome. Sometimes my paintings are
maps for drawings, comics, and prints. At times, I plan and plan
and plan, and break the rules. My work often looks like pieces of
drawings and prints taped together, woven with paint. I imagine
my drawings in series of dimensional spaces. I think about how
things in color and black-and-white relate. I apply thin layers of
transparencies like sheets of colored acetate that let me make
more colors with less. There’s nothing more compelling than
a color so vibrant that one thin, even layer over white shines
brighter than two or three. For a site-specific installation at the
ICA/Boston I extended a comic strip into dimensional space.
I see the activation of the wall and floor, or the wall and ceiling,
as gestures that resonate with open books.