Susumu Kamijo

Susumu Kamijo Finds Beauty Between Two Worlds

By the editors at The Collection·April 20, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

Something quietly electric is happening around the work of Susumu Kamijo. Collectors in Tokyo, Hong Kong, and across Western Europe have been tracking his practice with growing enthusiasm, drawn to a body of work that feels simultaneously rooted and restless, intimate and expansive. His pieces appear at auction with increasing regularity, and the range of his output, from luminous works on paper to polished sculptural objects, signals an artist whose vision refuses easy categorization. For those paying close attention, Kamijo has become one of the more compelling figures to emerge from a generation of Japanese artists who treat cultural inheritance not as a constraint but as a living resource.

Susumu Kamijo — 熱帶之夜

Susumu Kamijo

熱帶之夜

Kamijo is Japanese, and that fact is inseparable from understanding what his art does and why it resonates so broadly. Japan has one of the world's richest traditions of visual culture, encompassing ink painting, woodblock printmaking, lacquerwork, and a refined sensitivity to materials and natural forms that stretches back centuries. Artists who come of age within that tradition face a particular kind of creative pressure: how do you honor what is genuinely beautiful in that inheritance while speaking to a contemporary global audience? Kamijo's formation appears to have given him a deep fluency in both registers, and his practice lives in the productive tension between them.

The development of Kamijo's artistic voice can be traced through his choices of material and medium, which are themselves a kind of argument about what painting and sculpture can be asked to do. His works on paper, including pieces made with pastel pencil, oil pastel, oil crayon, and graphite, have a handmade intimacy that rewards close looking. These are not works that announce themselves loudly across a gallery. They ask you to come closer, and when you do, the layering of marks reveals a deliberateness and sensitivity that speaks to an artist who thinks carefully about touch.

Susumu Kamijo — Candy 糖果

Susumu Kamijo

Candy 糖果 , 2018

The paper works feel connected to a tradition of Japanese drawing and printmaking while remaining entirely contemporary in their mood and gesture. By 2018, Kamijo was producing works like "Candy" and "Resurrection on the Hill," pieces in pastel and oil pastel that demonstrate his command of color as an emotional register rather than merely a descriptive tool. "Bottom of the Hill" from 2017 and "The Longest Afternoon" from 2019 extend this sensibility, their titles alone suggesting a relationship to time and landscape that is more felt than mapped. There is something in these works that recalls the atmospheric qualities of Japanese nature poetry, the way a single image can hold a whole season or a specific quality of afternoon light, without ever becoming illustrative or sentimental.

Kamijo earns his lyricism through restraint. His engagement with canvas and paint opens another dimension of the practice. Works executed in Flashe vinyl paint on canvas, including pieces titled "Untitled" and "Tropical Night" (rendered in Chinese characters as "熱帶之夜"), demonstrate a different kind of ambition. Flashe, a matte vinyl paint with a particular flatness and chromatic intensity, has been embraced by a number of contemporary painters for its ability to produce surfaces that feel graphic and painterly at once.

Susumu Kamijo — Bottom of the Hill

Susumu Kamijo

Bottom of the Hill, 2017

In Kamijo's hands, the medium allows for a visual language that bridges the flatness associated with Japanese woodblock aesthetics and the more gestural traditions of Western abstraction. The results feel genuinely original, occupying a space that is hard to place historically because it draws from multiple histories simultaneously. Perhaps the most striking dimension of Kamijo's practice is his move into sculpture. "Dance For Me In The Dusk," created in 2021 and executed in polished walnut wood with glass and crystal resin details, represents a significant statement.

The work was presented in its original foam lined wooden crate, a detail that is not incidental: the crate itself becomes part of the object's story, a record of the care taken in its making and movement through the world. Walnut, glass, and resin are materials with very different characters, one warm and organic, one transparent and precise, one luminous and synthetic, and the fact that Kamijo brings them into coherent dialogue says something important about his sensibility. This is an artist who thinks about the whole experience of an object, not just its surface. For collectors, the breadth of Kamijo's output across works on paper, canvas paintings, prints, and sculpture offers genuine range in terms of scale, medium, and price point.

Susumu Kamijo — Dance For Me In The Dusk

Susumu Kamijo

Dance For Me In The Dusk, 2021

Works such as "Day Trippers," a screenprint in colors on Coventry paper, suggest an artist who has also engaged seriously with the tradition of printmaking as a democratic and technically demanding form. The presence of full margins on that work signals an attention to the complete object that print collectors will recognize and appreciate. Kamijo's works on paper offer accessible entry points into a practice that is clearly developing in scale and ambition, and acquiring early is a decision that collectors of Japanese contemporary art have historically found rewarding. In terms of art historical context, Kamijo's practice invites comparison with a range of figures who have navigated similar crossings between Eastern and Western visual traditions.

One thinks of artists like Katsutoshi Yuasa or the broader lineage of postwar Japanese painters who found ways to absorb and transform the influence of European modernism without surrendering their own cultural grounding. His use of materials also resonates with the Mono ha movement's attention to the character of physical substances, even as his work is more openly expressive and less austere than that movement tended to be. Internationally, collectors who admire the work of Yukultji Napangati or Cecily Brown, artists who create immersive, pattern oriented experiences with strong cultural rootedness, may find in Kamijo a related sensibility expressed through a Japanese lens. What Kamijo ultimately offers is a practice that grows more interesting the longer you spend with it.

The works do not exhaust themselves in a single viewing. They accumulate meaning across different lights, different moods, different moments in the viewer's own life. That quality of sustained interest is rare, and it is one of the best indicators that an artist is doing something genuinely substantial rather than merely stylish. As his profile continues to rise in both Asian and Western collecting circles, Kamijo stands as a reminder of what is possible when an artist takes their full inheritance seriously and then pushes well beyond it.

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