[6] Kashiki reinforces themes that are found elsewhere in contemporary Japanese art such as providing immersive visual escapes from society's uneasiness left from recent natural disasters like the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.
[8] Kashiki primarily paints female figures[9] and is said to also draw inspiration from Bijin-ga style of depicting beautiful women, a central theme from the ukiyo-e genre of Japanese art.
The hallways, columns, windows, even electrical sockets provide a definitive sense of ground[8] yet seemingly empty, varied, and flattened perspectives[5] create "an imaginary and ethereal world with no specific temporal or geographic location".
[10] "...gesture, facial expression, pose, specific objects, background, location, situation, spacial [sic] composition, surface texture, line thickness, nexus of layers, degree of blurring" all become relevant considerations to her vision.
[8] Bodies and shadowy figures have unreal, distorted physiques – featuring excessively long, flowing limbs – a common characteristic to find in Surrealist art.