Next Big Thing: Shota Nakamura

The Japanese artist creates contemplative figurative paintings that fuse a naive, folkloric aesthetic with palpable psychological weight

Person standing next to a painting on a white wall in an art gallery setting.
The artist at Taka Ishii Gallery with his 2025 work Still Life with Apples. Photo: KENJI TAKAHASHI, © SHOTA NAKAMURA, COURTESY OF TAKA ISHII GALLERY

Berlin-based, Japanese artist Shota Nakamura creates contemplative figurative paintings that fuse a naive, folkloric aesthetic with palpable psychological weight. His subjects—often anonymous figures at rest—are placed in dreamlike landscapes where color and light are the true protagonists. A profound affinity for the natural world, cultivated during his upbringing near Mount Fuji, underpins the work. “What I am most deeply interested in is the tonality of light,” says the artist, whose recent concurrent shows, “Blue and Green” and “Orient,” were his first with Taka Ishii Gallery in Tokyo.

Painting of an interior with an open window and a view of a green lawn, featuring a fishbowl on a small table.
Goldfish by the Window (2025) by Shota Nakamura. Photo: KENJI TAKAHASHI, © SHOTA NAKAMURA, COURTESY OF TAKA ISHII GALLERY
Abstract watercolor painting
Untitled (2024) by Shota Nakamura. Photo: KENJI TAKAHASHI, © SHOTA NAKAMURA, COURTESY OF TAKA ISHII GALLERY

Unique process: “I often leave a painting aside and return to it later. I can add a new stroke beside one I made two years ago or discover a new direction by revisiting a canvas that has been sitting unfinished for a long while. That dialogue across time is something I love about painting. It allows me to keep testing colors, making marks, and probing different subjects.”

Painting of sea
Seashore (2025) by Shota Nakamura. Photo: KENJI TAKAHASHI, © SHOTA NAKAMURA, COURTESY OF TAKA ISHII GALLERY

“Shota’s latest compositions evoke early modernist sensibilities while articulating a deeply contemporary meditation on perception and the passage of time,” says Vincenzo de Bellis, Chief Artistic Officer and Global Director of Art Basel Fairs.

Watercolor painting still life of glass and fruits
Untitled (2024-2025) by Shota Nakamura. Photo: KENJI TAKAHASHI, © SHOTA NAKAMURA, COURTESY OF TAKA ISHII GALLERY

A version of this article first appeared in print in our 2025 Winter issue under the headline “Next Big Things.” Subscribe to the magazine.