In her latest solo exhibition, “I Can Go There. So Can You.” at Tomio Koyama Gallery, Japanese artist Nana Funo invites viewers into a universe where memory, time, and imagination quietly intertwine. Her paintings unfold like layered narratives—images built upon hidden traces of earlier forms—suggesting worlds where past and present overlap in delicate, luminous harmony.

Funo’s distinctive process involves multiple layers in which initial imagery is then covered with a fresh layer of acrylic, allowing submerged motifs to subtly influence what emerges on the surface. This technique creates works that feel both intimate and expansive, mirroring how personal histories and forgotten moments shape the present.

Her surfaces shimmer with a texture reminiscent of porcelain, embroidery, or engraved metal, yet every nuance is achieved solely through careful brushwork.

Recurring symbols like moons, trees, seeds and small animals anchor her recent works, reflecting her fascination with “encompassing different timelines” and preserving fleeting memories of family life and nature. These motifs transform into conceptual landscapes where human experience and the rhythms of the natural world converge, evoking a quiet sense of continuity stretching from the past toward the future.

“I Can Go There. So Can You.” is on view at Tomio Koyama Gallery in Tokyo through February 21, 2026.