Japanese artist Ryoichi Kurokawa wins Richard Mille Art Prize 

From left to right: Yuko Hasegawa, Maya Allison, H. H. Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan bin Khalifa Al Nahyan, H.E. Saood Al Hosani, Ryoichi Kurokawa, Tilly Harrison, Amanda Mille, Manuel Rabaté, Sophie Mayuko Arni, and Dr. Guilhem André. (Supplied)
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Updated 15 December 2025
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Japanese artist Ryoichi Kurokawa wins Richard Mille Art Prize 

DUBAI: Japanese artist Ryoichi Kurokawa has been awarded the Richard Mille Art Prize by the Louvre Abu Dhabi and luxury brand Richard Mille. 

Kurokawa was chosen from the shortlisted artists whose works are featured in Louvre Abu Dhabi’s “Art Here” 2025 exhibition. The artist received the award along with a $60,000 prize during a ceremony in Nikko, Japan, this week. 

The artist’s winning work “skadw-” transforms shadows into an immersive, atmospheric installation that uses light, sound, and drifting fog to shape a shadow. A narrow beam moves through layers of mist, generating patterns that appear and dissolve. 

Kurokawa was responding to the art prize’s 2025 theme “Shadows” and, according to organizers, sought to approach shadow not as a byproduct of light “but as a substance that shapes how we sense space.” 

“Ryoichi Kurokawa’s ‘skadw-’ presents a nuanced response to this year’s theme. His approach, shaped by traditions from Japan and connected to a wider audience, speaks to the cross-cultural exchange at the core of the Richard Mille Art Prize,” Tilly Harrison, managing director Richard Mille Middle East, said in a statement. 

Kurokawa is an audiovisual artist who was born in Osaka in 1978. He is now lives and works in Berlin. 

The winner was selected by a five-member jury comprising Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan bin Khalifa Al-Nahyan, chairman of Alliances for Global Sustainability, founder of UAE Unlimited, an art collector, and board member of the British Museum and Centre Pompidou; Guilhem Andre, director of scientific, curatorial, and collection management at Louvre Abu Dhabi; Maya Allison, chief curator at New York University Abu Dhabi and founding executive director of the NYUAD Art Gallery; Sophie Mayuko Arni, exhibition curator and founding editor of Global Art Daily; and Yuko Hasegawa, research professor at Kyoto University and former director of the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa. 


‘The Wild Within’ sees artists breathe new life into Mideast buildings

Updated 16 December 2025
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‘The Wild Within’ sees artists breathe new life into Mideast buildings

DUBAI: Lens-based artist Ryan Koopmans and digital artist Alice Wexell are staging a showcase at Dubai’s Leila Heller Gallery that breathes new life into regional buildings.

The series of digital artworks is part of the exhibition “The Wild Within,” featuring images of old structures in Beirut, Istanbul, and Abu Dhabi filled with wild flowers.

Two of the largest works, “Heartbeats” and “The Wish,” are displayed using Ventana, a microLED architectural display surface created by visual technology company Megapixel.

'Around Us' by Ryan Koopmans and Alice Wexell. (Supplied) 

The former artwork depicts the entrance hall of Qasr Al-Watan, the UAE’s presidential palace in Abu Dhabi, while the latter reimagines the upper floors of the Emirates Palace Mandarin Oriental in Abu Dhabi.

“Each building we work with comes to us through a combination of research, travel, and intuition,” the artists told Arab News in a joint statement.

'Constellations' by Ryan Koopmans and Alice Wexell. (Supplied) 

“We are drawn to structures that carry both emotional and historical resonance, often buildings that once embodied human ambition and now exist in a state of quiet transformation.”

Koopans and Wexell made sure to research the context of each building they choose to recreate, saying “an old villa in Jeddah or a former school in Sharjah each hold their own cultural memory, influencing everything from the lighting and atmosphere to the plants and flowers that we digitally sculpt and implement into the photographs.”

'Heart of Sharjah' by Ryan Koopmans and Alice Wexell. (Supplied) 

The hypnotic works depict the interior of buildings in the region, with digitally rendered flowers carpeting the floor in a bid to “(reimage) these spaces (and) explore the relationship between nature, place, and time, while celebrating each site as a unique work of architecture with its own spirit and story,” the artists said.

Koopmans is of dual Canadian and Dutch heritage, while Wexell is Swedish and based in Stockholm, so it is noteworthy that both artists chose to explore the Middle East for their latest project.

'Blossom of the Ancestors' by Ryan Koopmans and Alice Wexell. (Supplied) 

“In the Middle East especially, the architecture reflects a layered past that merges different styles and eras, while also expressing a sense of renewal and forward-looking energy, particularly in the region’s fantastic contemporary buildings. We are drawn to the symmetry, geometry and patterns that are found not only in nature itself, but in the architectural language of the region both past and present,” they said.

The series — featuring works such as “Adore You,” “Between Worlds,” and “Blossom of the Ancestors” — explores contrasts between the natural world and human-made forms, as well as the traditional and contemporary worlds.

“We are interested in how these elements coexist and merge into one another, creating a sense of hyperrealism that feels both familiar and imaginary. By merging photography with digital sculpture, the artworks question where the boundary lies between documentation and invention, and how technology can extend rather than replace our sense of the natural world.”

'Under the Rain of Light' by Ryan Koopmans and Alice Wexell. (Supplied) 

Although the scale of the artworks ensures they leave the viewer entranced, it did pose challenges, according to the artists.

“Presented at a large scale, every texture in these artworks becomes visible, which can be demanding but is also incredibly rewarding. The magnified detail allows the visceral and atmospheric layers of the pieces to come through with greater impact,” they said, adding that each piece took “many months” to create.

“Ultimately, we want our collectors to experience a sense of wonder and contemplation, as if they are standing inside a dream that feels both entirely real yet unreal.”

The exhibition runs until Jan. 15, 2026.