Opening Reception – Mami Takahashi: Soft Evidence

Mami Takahashi: Soft Evidence
March 6, 2026
6:00-8:00pm
Doors at 5:30pm
Free and open to the public
Mami Takahashi: Soft Evidence
March 6 – May 31, 2026
Soft Evidence is a solo exhibition by Mami Takahashi that brings together video, textile-based installation, performance documentation, and collaborative works to explore how women’s bodies communicate, resist legibility, and carry memory within everyday life. Rooted in attentiveness rather than spectacle, the exhibition considers the body as both a site of expression and a surface onto which social expectations, histories, and perceptions are projected.
Developed in collaboration with women-identifying participants living in different U.S. cities, the exhibition draws from informal, everyday actions rather than scripted narratives. Participants were invited to record short videos of their bodies—partial views, gestures, and routine movements—capturing how they inhabit space in ways that are both visible and vulnerable. These works appear alongside Takahashi’s own performance-based videos, forming a layered conversation between individual experience and collective presence.
In the front gallery, the collaborative videos are shown together with two earlier works by the artist, Writing Myself and Cage Mentality. In Writing Myself, Takahashi writes in Japanese on clear film until her body is gradually obscured, creating a visual tension between self-expression and erasure. Cage Mentality documents a durational performance in which she constructs a restrictive structure around her body using string, revealing both the comfort and constraint of enclosure. These works frame the body as a communicative tool that is never fully under one’s control, shaped by repetition, discipline, and external interpretation.
Textile-based installations composed of inherited household fabrics and kimono materials extend these concerns into the domestic sphere. Accumulated through generations of women in the artist’s family, the fabrics embody care, labor, and quiet persistence. Layered, folded, and woven into the exhibition space, they function as material traces of lived experience—objects that hold memory without explanation.
Moving from the galleries into transitional space, a subtle auditory element introduces another register of presence through layered voices gathered over time. Rather than operating as testimony, these fragments exist as ambient traces, emphasizing proximity and attention rather than narrative clarity.
The exhibition concludes with documentation of Who Knows (2024), a performance by Spiral Body previously presented at the International Museum of Surgical Science. In this work, Takahashi’s body shifts between audience member, performer, and concealment, reinforcing her ongoing inquiry into visibility, displacement, and relational identity within public space.
Across its varied forms, Soft Evidence proposes that meaning often emerges through restraint—through what is partially hidden, quietly repeated, or left unresolved. The exhibition invites viewers to slow down and consider how bodies hold knowledge not through declaration, but through presence, endurance, and care.
Mami Takahashi is a multidisciplinary artist from Tokyo, based in Chicago. Working across performance, video, sound, poetry, and installation, her practice examines how bodies communicate, become visible, or are obscured within social and cultural space. Through collaborative and process-based approaches, Takahashi often works with everyday gestures, spoken language, and listening as materials, exploring themes of displacement, cultural transition, and collective presence.
Her work has been presented at venues including Artists Space, New York; the International Museum of Surgical Science, Chicago; Portland Institute for Contemporary Art; San Francisco Art Institute; Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Canada; Gwangju Folk Art Museum, Korea; Instituto Municipal del Arte y la Cultura, Mexico; and Toriizaka Art Gallery, Tokyo, among others. She holds an MFA from Portland State University and a BFA from Joshibi University of Art and Design in Japan. Takahashi is a recipient of the Ford Family Foundation Award for a residency at MASS MoCA.
This project is partially supported by a CityArts grant from the City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events.
The International Museum of Surgical Science acknowledges support from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.