through trial and error, painted bubbles. also caught on camera, he wows his gallery audience by creating a massive painting on traditional paper using a very unconventional brush. translator: when i m painting a large goldfish, i can see a large goldfish swimming and it s as if i ve caught it with my broom, like it s right here. it s fishing within the surface of the paper. and when i ve caught a glimpse of it and caught it, that s when i put my brush to work. his passion for goldfish and their beauty withstands the test of time. despite the eye-bending realism of his creations, he modestly believes he has not yet achieved perfection. translator: i realize the goldfish is something incredibly important to us japanese. it carries many messages. how would i call it? identity. i want to keep doing this in this style until a beautiful goldfish is born. z a triple homicide caught on camera. it s 22 minutes, seems like 22 hours. taking the tech nine in the back of the head of
the inside of a wooden pail more than four feet in diameter. translator: it has such power. i really love it. people have never seen anything like this before. it s a skill only possessed by him. a skill created by him. the fact that they appear to be alive inside the wooden pail speaks to his skills, technique and his thoughts. translator: i realized if i didn t include an air ventilation that they would die. so i decided to also include some air in the piece, and through trial and error, painted bubbles. also caught on camera, he wows his gallery audience by creating a massive painting on traditional paper using a very unconventional brush.
your brain takes what you see on the surface of the water and makes you think that the object you re seeing has been compressed. my goldfish don t have any thickness. people automatically imagine the depth and feel. perfecting this intricate illusion takes years of painstaking trial and error. translator: there would be pieces where i had spent months to make and just as i put in the last layer, it would get destroyed. for each layer of resin, my heart is contracting little by little, making sure that no air is getting in. sweating while doing that. don t blink. these 100 goldfish swimming through rippled water are actually part of his 2011 exhibit called goldfish salvation in london s icn gallery. the curator and director of the exhibit that boasts the largest resin creation.
makes you think that the object you re seeing has been compressed. my goldfish don t have any thickness. people automatically imagine the depth and feel. perfecting this intricate illusion takes years of painstaking trial and error. translator: there would be pieces where i had spent months to make and just as i put in the last layer, it would get destroyed. for each layer of resin, my heart is contracting little by little, making sure that no air is getting in. sweating while doing that. don t blink. these 100 goldfish swimming through rippled water are actually part of his 2011 exhibit called goldfish salvation in london s icn gallery. the curator and director of the exhibit that boasts the largest resin creation. the inside of a wooden pail more
than four feet in diameter. translator: it has such power. i really love it. people have never seen anything like this before. it s a skill only possessed by him. a skill created by him. the fact that they appear to be alive inside the wooden pail speaks to his skills, technique and his thoughts. translator: i realized if i didn t include an air ventilation that they would die. so i decided to also include some air in the piece, and through trial and error, painted bubbles. also caught on camera, he wows his gallery audience by creating a massive painting on traditional paper using a very unconventional brush.