
$6,200
A portrait is a depiction of a specific individual, which became an established style of painting during the Renaissance. Since then, many artists have created portraits with a wide variety of themes. Some portraits have pursued realism while others have emphasized the beauty or exaggerated the ugliness of their subjects. In the past, the creation of a portrait typically required the artist and subject to be face-to-face, but in Portrait of dazzle, neither the artist nor the subject know who the other is (and in this case, the subject is not even aware that they are a subject of a portrait). In this series, portraits of the modern person are created from the countless photos of faces posted online by tracing and projecting the eyes onto a dazzle camouflaged silhouette of a person whose race, sex, hairstyle, or body shape differs from that of the original subject. By using photographs of real people, Portrait of dazzleencourages viewers to consider that the eyes depicted may belong to people they know or even themselves and brings to attention growing social issues like digital tattoos, deepfakes, and generative AI. Dazzle camouflage was a type of ship camouflage used during World War I. As its name suggests, it was meant to dazzle and confuse the human eye. In an era where radar technology did not exist, an enemy vessel’s range and heading needed to be visually identified for targeting. The complex black and white patterns painted on ships with dazzle camouflage reportedly made it difficult to ascertain the target's distance and direction of movement and hindered the calculation of accurate firing solutions. Because dazzle camouflage is such an apt metaphor for the confusion caused by the uncertain veracity of information online, it is a frequent motif in my work. / Artist Shigeki Matsuyama
Artwork details+
- Medium
- Acrylic on Canvas
- Size
- 100 cm x 80.3 cm x 2.5 cm
- Year
- 2024
- Signature
- Hand Signed by Artist
- Edition
- Unique work
- Certificate
- Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
- Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
- Cost calculated at checkout by destination
- Optional full insurance in transit
- Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
- In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
- Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
- Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
- These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
- Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction

Shigeki Matsuyama is a Japanese contemporary artist. His work was shaped by his early career as an illustrator and his philosophical reflections following the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake. He has since pursued a more conceptual art practice, reinterpreting through his work the impact of modern society's consumerism, pop culture, media, and technology on the human experience. His works provide visual play through the use of repetitive patterns and intense colors, and he is expanding his artistic expression through various media, including not only painting but also objects and installations.
Go to artist page →
CDA is a gallery stands for ‘Creative’, ‘Discovery’, and ‘Appreciation’. The gallery mainly presents creative activities in various fields of contemporary visual arts in the form of exhibitions. CDA exhibition mainly focuses on paintings but subjects to all kinds of genres and mediums such as sculpture, prints, photography, animation, and video. The form of the exhibitions is also balanced, with a mix of solo and group exhibitions, as well as art fairs and collaborative projects. We sincerely hope that our activities will serve as a spark for the realization of meaningful projects for creators(artists) and an opportunity for audiences to expand their inspiration and collecting.
Go to gallery page →$6,200
A portrait is a depiction of a specific individual, which became an established style of painting during the Renaissance. Since then, many artists have created portraits with a wide variety of themes. Some portraits have pursued realism while others have emphasized the beauty or exaggerated the ugliness of their subjects. In the past, the creation of a portrait typically required the artist and subject to be face-to-face, but in Portrait of dazzle, neither the artist nor the subject know who the other is (and in this case, the subject is not even aware that they are a subject of a portrait). In this series, portraits of the modern person are created from the countless photos of faces posted online by tracing and projecting the eyes onto a dazzle camouflaged silhouette of a person whose race, sex, hairstyle, or body shape differs from that of the original subject. By using photographs of real people, Portrait of dazzleencourages viewers to consider that the eyes depicted may belong to people they know or even themselves and brings to attention growing social issues like digital tattoos, deepfakes, and generative AI. Dazzle camouflage was a type of ship camouflage used during World War I. As its name suggests, it was meant to dazzle and confuse the human eye. In an era where radar technology did not exist, an enemy vessel’s range and heading needed to be visually identified for targeting. The complex black and white patterns painted on ships with dazzle camouflage reportedly made it difficult to ascertain the target's distance and direction of movement and hindered the calculation of accurate firing solutions. Because dazzle camouflage is such an apt metaphor for the confusion caused by the uncertain veracity of information online, it is a frequent motif in my work. / Artist Shigeki Matsuyama
Artwork details+
- Medium
- Acrylic on Canvas
- Size
- 100 cm x 80.3 cm x 2.5 cm
- Year
- 2024
- Signature
- Hand Signed by Artist
- Edition
- Unique work
- Certificate
- Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
- Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
- Cost calculated at checkout by destination
- Optional full insurance in transit
- Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
- In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
- Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
- Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
- These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
- Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction








$6,200