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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. |
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Questions of Private and Public Memory: 1968 and The Holocaust |
11 April - 17 May 2009 |
Tokyo Wonder Site Shibuya
(Tokyo) |
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Artists of two recent residencies share results in a joint show. U.S.-based Bradley McCallum and Jacqueline Tarry's "Indelible Image" examines the Japanese student protests of 1968, their skewed and blurred silkscreen photo prints evoking the fading of memory. Germany-based British-Israeli photographer Yishay Garbasz's "In My Mother's Footsteps" traces the experiences of her mother, a Holocaust survivor. |
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Masashi Asada: Asada-ke, Aka-aka, Aka-chan |
16 April - 17 May 2009 |
AKAAKA
(Tokyo) |
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Winner of this year's Ihei Kimura Award, Asada is known for photos of his entire family engaged in roleplay. This show includes a promising new series featuring other families besides his own. Asada's staged shots of the household as rock band, baseball team, or wedding party are charmingly irreverent, but also betray a touch of cynicism about the state of the Japanese family today. |
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Tsubaki-kai Exhibition 2009: Trans-Figurative |
7 April - 21 June 2009 |
Shiseido Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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Tsubaki-kai is a group exhibition held at Shiseido Gallery (now celebrating its 90th year) since 1947. The works by this year's artists are meticulously segregated -- Masanori Sukenari's sculptures in the basement, Yasuko Iba and Naofumi Maruyama's disparate paintings in the main gallery, and Chiharu Shiota's installation of strands of yarn in a back room. One yearns for a bit more interaction, even friction, among them.
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Sayaka Ono: Carry the Prayers of Ants to Heaven |
10 - 19 April 2009 |
Café & Gallery Rihou
(Kyoto) |
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Known previously for delicate portraits of her grandmother, Ono here moves in a different direction with quiet, simple works using just a few motifs -- trees, the moon, ants. They go nicely with the homey ambience of the gallery, a plain room in a traditional Kyoto house, with the wind rustling the curtain through an open window.
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