
12 April (Sat) – 31 May (Sat), 2025
12:00 - 19:00 Closed on Sun, Mon and National Holidays
at RoppongiYutaka Kikutake Gallery
Girls, Making Paper Balloon Bombs, based on Kobayashi’s meticulous research, is a novel that depicts schoolgirls who were mobilized to make balloon bombs at the Tokyo Takarazuka Theater in Yurakucho during World War Two. This exhibition held at Yutaka Kikutake Gallery entrust the voices of these girls, buried in the shadows of mainstream history, to a real person named Y, who was a student at Futaba Girls’ High School at the time. Through Kobayashi’s portrait of Y, as well as paintings and Iroha poems that Y herself made as a student, Kobayashi traces these overlooked people and histories. This exhibition itself is in dialogue with Kobayashi’s The Life of Y – A Building, exhibited for Yurakucho Art Urbanism’s Open Studio ‘25 (March 6-9, 2025), and features mosaic tiles and reliefs from the Yaesu Building. This building was constructed the same year the girls were born and served as a hotel for the US military during the postwar occupation. Viewers will encounter actual architectural remnants that existed at the same time as the girls, remnants may have even been passed by, observed, and considered by these same schoolgirls.


The series entitled Cherry Blossoms is a new body of work in which themes or places associated with the schoolgirls are depicted on the silk lining of Furisode (young girls’ kimono.) The work spans various periods of time, from the year the Yaesu Building was completed and the year the girls were born (1928) to the end of the war (1945), as well as pre-war, post-war, and present day. Regardless of the time period, Kobayashi depicts these historical figures as ordinary schoolgirls, while also capturing the fleeting life of one of them, Y, through the symbolism of cherry blossoms.

