The dozen paintings on panel and watercolors on paper that comprise Sono Osato’s current exhibition reminded me of a diary entry penned by Franz Kafka: “The clocks are not in unison; the inner one runs crazily on at a devilish or demoniac or in any case inhuman pace, the outer one limps along at its usual speed.” Indeed, there is something amiss in these modestly scaled images of floating clock parts. There is also more than meets the eye here, having to do with the elusive balance between conjunction and disjunction.
“Diluvia” is a geological term that refers to a glacial drift in a tundra landscape, exemplifying the inexorable slowness of geological time. A “Midden” is a heap of archeological objects that document socioecological relationships and human–environmental interactions over that time. These prompts allow us to see Osato’s works as imaginary archaeologies of a soon-to-be-bygone material culture captured and persevered in aesthetic amber. Seen as memorials to the collapse and decay of Newtonian orderliness, the artist counters the multi-perspective velocities of post-Newtonian metaphysics. Her paintings also speed up the sense of an orderly world slowly dissolving over time, aligning them with the motion capture paintings of the Italian Futurists.
Although Osato’s paintings are thematically unified, they vary dramatically in tone and execution. The three-panel “Diluvia #1” (2021) presents a cascade of mechanical forms flowing from panel to panel, rendered in various shades of yellow ocher set against a bright yellow background. The transitions between the specified foreground and the energized background are subtle and cheerful. Other works are more elegiac in tone, using a wider spectrum of autumnal colors and clear, decisive outlines. The tooth-edged ovals of “Midden #1” (2025) coalesce against a light blue picture space. The ovals are of different sizes and painted in a color range running from purple to dark red to orange.
Sometimes, other materials enter the mix. For example, in “Diluvia #7 (2025), Osato uses subtle chromatic tints in her rabbit-skin glue primer, with which she builds up layers of shapes with varying levels of contrast. The use of red oxide and dark purple brings to mind Charles Demuth’s “I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold” (1928), suggesting that Osato identifies with the aesthetic aims of the American Precisionist movement. However, instead of celebrating the culture of industrial streamlining, her works intimate the unwinding and slow collapse of that very culture.
A few of the works on paper also display unusual techniques such as mixing dry pigment and graphite with gouache and watercolor. This creates a dreamy, effervescent effect that shrouds the discernible shapes into a smoky cloud of indistinction. These works are charming and seductive when viewed alongside the panels, as one might expect from their smaller size. The smallest is particularly seductive. Titled “Midden #10” (2015), it is a swirling composition that telescopes diagonally into a deep, amorphous space.
Sono Osato - Evolution of an Idea: Diluvia to Midden
Paul Thiebaud Gallery, San Francisco
Continuing through January 10, 2026
About the Author
Mark Van Proyen has written commentaries emphasize the tragic consequences of blind faith placed in economies of narcissistic reward. In 2020, he retired from the faculty of the San Francisco Art Institute, where he taught Painting and Art History. From 2003 to 2018, he was a corresponding editor for Art in America. In 2025 he relaunched SquareCylinder with co-publishers Bill Lasarow and DeWitt Cheng.