Maya Makino – Out of Focus

CAI is pleased to announce Out of Focus, a solo exhibition by the Japanese artist Maya Makino, showcasing nine characteristic indigo dye paintings on an intimately small scale. The show marks the artist’s first solo exhibition in Belgium and the third exhibition within the CAI Gallery program.

Maya Makino aims to capture and preserve the experience of witnessing scenes from the past triggered by an involuntary awareness of sensations. Think of the quietness of the night or the sound of rain. Recently, the artist has taken a more focused perspective on the phenomenon of remembering—both intentional and unintentional. In this mental space, vividness, oblivion, and the ambiguity of memory seem to coexist. A memory can be restored, reinforced, or even transformed in the act of remembering. It shifts the vividness and evaluation of the memory, often resulting in a discrepancy between what the original memory was and what it has become. However, even when memories take on a life of their own and diverge from reality, they can still be genuine and, therefore, true.

Installation View of "Out of Focus" by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery
Installation View of “Out of Focus” by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery
Installation View of "Out of Focus" by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery
Installation View of “Out of Focus” by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery

In Out of Focus, Maya Makino brings this fascinating concept to life in her characteristic indigo-blue paintings. She uses a single dye to achieve a range of indigo blue hues, working on wooden panels primed with a traditional gesso made of gofun—also known as shell lime. By doing so, the Japanese artist is able to create subtle textures and reliefs on her surfaces before soaking the panels with an intense dye. The indigo does not sit on top of the surface; it penetrates the support—parallel to how the mind is penetrated and altered in an act of remembrance. The Japanese artist approaches painting as a phenomenon emerging from deep within the support, as the color impels the painting to transcend its material aspects.

The nine paintings on panel are humble in scale, yet they exude a mysterious presence that fills the entire space. Four vertically oriented paintings, measuring just eighteen by fourteen centimeters—or seven by five inches—from her ongoing Night series create a sequence of blue shimmers, glints of memories of the night. Night turns into midnight in her new and eponymous series of square panels measuring thirty by thirty centimeters—or twelve by twelve inches—marked by using two of her most intense dark indigo hues. The edge separating the hues creates a characteristic horizontal band, as if a horizon, summoning an atmospheric quality similar to her Night series. A third characteristic, in which Makino raises the shape on a flat surface using gofun gesso to give it relief, can be found in two textured panels measuring eighteen by fourteen centimeters, or seven by five inches, with vertical strips rolling down the plane of the canvas in her Rain series.

By appointment only.

Installation View of "Out of Focus" by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery
Installation View of “Out of Focus” by Maya Makino at CAI Gallery, Belgium, 2025 © The Artist, Image Courtesy CAI Gallery

© Text and Photo Courtesy of CAI Gallery

DETAILS
Maya Makino – Out of Focus
03 May → 31 August 2025

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