Kosen Ohtsubo & Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham

Flower Planet

February 1 – April 21, 2025
Opening: Friday, January 31, 7pm

The artists Kosen Ohtsubo and Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham share an unusual approach to ikebana and an interest in how one person enables the work of the other. Working with living material, the practices confront us with questions of being in and with this world, processes of decay, transient beauty, and the elusive nature of human control.

With Flower Planet, Kunstverein München presents two artists in ongoing dialog with each other that create fragile sculptures that challenge us to see the earth as a living entity and not as territory to be owned. This understanding of ecology and conceptual art practice is an urgent component in the current state of our (surrounding) world.

The Japanese artist Kosen Ohtsubo is one of the most important practitioners and teachers of the art form of ikebana. Traditionally, the ikebana arrangement is intended to bring nature into the human habitat through precious plants, arranged in such a way to represent the cosmic order. In the 1970s, however, Ohtsubo became well-known for his use of everyday materials such as vegetables and waste. His works give a subversive and completely surprising form to the elegant materials that have, for centuries, made up the art form of ikebana. “I want to explode the idea of beautiful ikebana,” says Ohtsubo, who utilizes traditional botanical materials that take unexpected detours, resulting in bathtubs becoming vessels for bodies and flowers, entire junkyards becoming entangled in sprawling arrangements, or fashioning elaborate torture devices that split trees in half. 

Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham is concerned with the relationships inscribed in the production and life of things. They understand ikebana and working with living matter as acts of negotiation. A negotiation of time, space, material, of human interrelations. Ikebana—for them—is also an almost-performative display of the illusion of control. In 2013, Oldham first saw Ohtsubo’s work in a book and contacted him. What followed were years of correspondence and training with Ohtsubo in Japan in an intensive teacher-student relationship. Parallel to their training as an ikebana master, Oldham began archiving the majority of Ohtsubo’s extensive photo archive from the last fifty years and giving lectures on the development and teaching of the practice. This was followed by exhibitions of photographs of Ohtsubo’s work in Seattle, New York, and Los Angeles. These acts of mediation and concern for the visibility of Ohtsubo’s practice became a medium for Oldham to negotiate questions of collective authorship and appropriation, (il)legibility, and acts of advocacy.


[1] Kosen Ohtsubo, リンガジャポニカ / Linga Japonica, Iris, soil, variety of branches and flowers, April, 1991; Photo: the artist.
[2] Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, This is happening because we live today in a time of corruption (as well as among corrupt people) and we have to study as hard as possible to avoid corruption, particularly that of our own time, which takes hold of us before we can avoid it, and also that of the past, because we now know all the vices of art and want to protect ourselves against them. We no longer have the simplicity of the Greeks and Romans or the writers of the 14th and 16th centuries, because we have passed through the time of corruption and have become cunning in our art. We avoid those vices with our cunning and our art, not with nature’s help, as the ancients did, who did not know much about them, but who, because art was in its infancy and still not corrupted, neither avoided nor fell into such vices. They were like children who know no vices, we are like old people who know them but avoid them through judgment and experience., Asparagus, cotinus, September 27 – November 4, 2017; Photo: Jueqian Fang. 
[3] Kosen Ohtsubo, Play with Funnels, Golden lily of the valley, fox face, plastic funnel, c. 1990s, Photo: Ryusei Photo Department.
[4] Kosen Ohtsubo, 皆のっかってグッチャグチャ / Step on it, Spring onion, steel, May, 1973, in: Ikebana Ryusei Magazine, July, 1973; Photo: Ryusei Photo Department.
[5] Christian Kōun Alborz Oldham, Untitled, Cable tie, metal cage, plastic tray, strelitzia, May, 2012; Photo: the artist.
[6] Kosen Ohtsubo, しなやかな木 / Supple Trees, Chair, Chinese parasol tree, December, 1979, in: Ikebana Ryusei Magazine, February, 1980; Photo: Ryusei Photo Department.


The project is funded by the Karin und Uwe Hollweg Stiftung.

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