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Picks is a monthly sampling of Japan's art scene, offering short reviews of exhibitions at museums and galleries in recent weeks, with an emphasis on contemporary art by young artists.

2 Feb 2009
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picks
Daido Moriyama: HOKKAIDO
19 December 2008 - 8 February 2009
Rat Hole Gallery
(Tokyo)
Legendary street photographer Moriyama spent two months in Hokkaido during the summer of 1978, wandering around the island and snapping whatever caught his eye. Inspired by the photos of Hokkaido shot a century earlier by Kenzo Tamoto and others at the request of the Meiji government's Hokkaido Colonization Board, Moriyama says he was motivated by a desire to find images that resonate with the earlier works.
picks
Chizuru Masumura: Esperanza
9 - 28 December 2008
neutron
(Kyoto)
Osaka-based Masumura has garnered deserved recognition for her paintings of body parts (using herself as a model) in poses that resemble pantomime. Though surreal in presentation (e.g. a headless torso tossing a disembodied fist into the air), her images are meticulously rendered with a persuasive realism.
picks
Iwata Nakayama: Modernist Light and Shadow
13 December 2008 - 8 February 2009
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
(Tokyo)
This retrospective offers a look at 55 defining works by Nakayama (1895-1949), a central figure in modernist prewar Japanese photography who spent the twenties in New York and Paris. Included are new prints from negatives that survived the destruction of Nakayama's Ashiya studio in the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995.
picks
Toshio Shibata: Landscape
13 December 2008 - 8 February 2009
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
(Tokyo)
Since the 1980s photographer Shibata has been shooting dams, concrete retaining walls and other massive manmade structures in outdoor settings. This, his first real retrospective in Japan, features not only the monochrome "landscapes" he is best known for, but also more recent works in color, which he has been working with since 2005.
picks
Idevian Crew Homme: Daikokubashira
18 - 20 December 2008
Little Theater, Kawasaki Art Center
(Kanagawa)
The thrill of watching Shigehiro Ide's dancers lies in their ability to generate sudden, shocking movements out of the smallest gestures. The huge daikokubashira (central pillar of a traditional Japanese house) looming over center stage is one such surprise. The all-male troupe (six performers in their thirties or forties), dressed as housebuilding artisans, surround the pillar as they engage in a mix of dance and manual labor.
picks
Okinawa Prismed: 1872-2008
31 October - 21 December 2008
National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo
(Tokyo)
This show endeavors to present the entire gamut of modern and contemporary expression (paintings, prints, crafts, photography, film) as applied to Okinawa from the Meiji era to the present. Consciously highlighting the difference between insider and outsider perspectives, it includes among the artists both native-born Okinawans and mainlanders who have taken an interest in the islands.
picks
Nao Tsuda: Smoke Line -- Tracing the Windstreams
28 October - 21 December 2008
Shiseido Gallery
(Tokyo)
Tsuda has gained notice in recent years for his pioneering work in new forms of expression through landscape photography. This solo show features images from locations in China, Morocco and Mongolia, where Tsuda traveled for three years.
picks
Natsunosuke Mise
13 - 27 December 2008
Imura Art Gallery
(Kyoto)
One of the young hopes of Nihonga (Japanese-style painting), Mise is known for his blending of countless images into compositions that transcend space and time. In this show he introduces some novel devices: inkjet-printed photograph collages, byobu screen-style mountings, and large framed works.
picks
Now, Oyamazaki... Yamaguchi Akira
11 December 2008 - 8 March 2009
Asahi Beer Oyamazaki Villa Museum
(Kyoto)
This is popular painter Yamaguchi's first solo show in the Kyoto-Osaka area. Working in the traditional Yamato-e style, Yamaguchi introduces new works inspired by the history of Oyamazaki, known for the Battle of Yamazaki in 1582 between Hideyoshi Toyotomi and Mitsuhide Akechi, as well as tea master Senno Rikyu's Taian teahouse.
picks
Yosuke Kobashi
8 - 20 December 2008
Gallery Den
(Osaka)
A 2003 graduate of Osaka University of Arts, Kobashi has already had several solo exhibitions of his bizarre figurative works. The thirteen paintings in this show reveal an intensification of the colorful palette for which he is already known.
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