• 百鬼夜行/2025
Ryo Ogata

尾形凌

Born in April 2001
Lives in Minato-ku, Tokyo

2018
Presentation of the screen painting for Seimeitei in Fukasawa, Setagaya
[Event Participation] TOKYO2020 Hamarikyu Gardens

2019
ZERO Exhibition ZERO Association Award

2019
[Solo Exhibition] First Exhibition "Uncle in Izakaya" Eel and Yakitori Torikoma Tamachi
[Event participation] WELCOME to Tokyo PROJECT "2019 TOKYO MITE"
[Solo Exhibition] "Roman Under the Moon" at Shiba Shodenji Temple

2020
Enrolled in the Department of Intermedia Art, Faculty of Fine Arts, Tokyo University of the Arts

2021
His first book, "Uncle Diary," was published by Shogakukan SHUEISHA Productions.
[Solo Exhibition] "100 FACES 100 Portraits" esu gallery Yutenji

2022
[Solo Exhibition] "Fiction-The RYO OGATA BAND" Marco Gallery, Shinsaibashi, Osaka

2023
[Group Exhibition] "Nihonbashi Anarchy Cultural Center Vol.5" Nihonbashi

[Solo Exhibition] "Nirvana" at diginner gallery Jiyugaoka

2024
Graduated from Tokyo University of the Arts, Faculty of Fine Arts, Department of Intermedia Art
[Group Exhibition] "Saturday Night Once More" (WALL alternative, ALL-Azabu)
Tokyo University of the Arts, Graduate School of Fine Arts, Master's Course Admission
"Geidai Arts in Marunouchi 2024" won the Mitsubishi Estate Award
[Group Exhibition] "MEET YOUR ART FESTIVAL 2024" (Around Tennozu Canal)
Special exhibition at the Tokyo University of the Arts Art Plaza: "Beautiful Foolishness - Were we born to play?"
[Group Exhibition] "YANMAR DE SIGN Future Scenery Exhibition" (YANMAR TOKYO Yaesu)

2025
[Group Exhibition] "START Box EXHIBITION vol.3" (YAU CENTER Yurakucho)
[Group Exhibition] "Teyandei Berabouume Exhibition" (27 Gallery Tokyo Nihonbashi)

[Solo Exhibition]
"Night Parade of One Hundred Demons" Jiyugaoka Diggner Gallery

 

"Yagyo of One Hundred Demons" is a group of monsters marching down the streets at night when humans are asleep.

Since ancient times, monsters have been inextricably linked to our lives.
These traditions continue to change depending on the local climate, customs, and community, and are preserved in various forms such as oral traditions, paintings, and documents, making them an integral part of modern society.
And if you ask whether they are completely supernatural, the answer is no, and they are certainly not human. They could be said to be a bridge between the natural world and the human world.

It depicts a parade of monsters marching through the city streets at night. Some rummage through trash on the roadside with crows, others transform into humans, and many more.
What are the monsters trying to tell us humans?
When we come face to face with a monster, we may realize for the first time that we are monsters.

Ryo Ogata CV