Art unit formed in 2011 consisting Eri Homma and Nabuchi.
Kyun-chome attempts to capture the contradictions or obsessions human innately possess.
Their expression confronting human karma vary in different locations or means as:
"Flower xx" (2012), an installation work of flowers the audience needs to step in order to enter the exhibition,
"Like howling to the farther world" (2013), video of Kyun-chome themselves howling in various locations around the devastated areas of the Great Tohoku Earthquake
and "Leading somewhere" (2014), an installation piece where they kept calling out "Mou ii kai (Ready or not?)", Japanese word spoken during Hide-and-seek game,
in the forest of Mt. Fuji known as one of the most famous suicide sites in Japan.
Kyun-chome received the grand prize of 17th Taro Okamoto Art Prize.
We collected kelp that had been submerged in the sea into which contaminated water still runs from aćnuclear power plant. The kelp has heartily grown upon a bed of rubble within waters no one will enter, among tsunami-destroyed homes that are now just garbage to be broken down by bulldozers.
An hourglass was made using that kelp.
With every grain of the "kelp clock" that falls, the countdown towards a "reset" continues.