By Grace Heinz

"The smallest feline is a masterpiece."
— Leonardo da Vinci

From January 15th to March 1st, 2025, artist Setsuko’s Kingdom of Cats is featured at the Gagosian in New York. Setsuko Klossowska de Rola is a Japanese artist working with several different mediums, including but not limited to watercolor and ceramics. Her current installation at Gagosian is a glimpse into her dialectical approach to life and death, nature and industry, the domestic and the untamed.

Photo credit: Thomas Lannes

Cats serve as a symbol of transformation for Setsuko. As natural beings, they permeate their domestic spheres with a sense of quiet primitiveness. Her work Le chat et la vie, for example, features a cat resting on the top of a tree, symbolizing an appropriation of nature for comfort. Similarly, Le grand chat au médallion displays a cat adorned in jewelry, representing the synthesis of the man-made and the natural. In these works the organic is fused with the inorganic, transforming into a corpus of originality and complexity. 

Setsuko’s emphasis on transformation is not limited to the feline sphere. Her work Daphné explores the myth of Apollo and Daphne, the latter transforming into a tree when she was pursued by the former. The myth comes from Ovid’s Metamorphosis, which emphasizes the fluid, changing nature of the essence of life through its various tales. 

How do we, as humans, balance our biological necessities and the inorganic industry we have created? How do we reckon with our animal natures and our intricate consciousnesses? This is the question that Setsuko explores with her works, challenging her audience to find a synthesis and beauty in the opposing.