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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.

1 October 2009
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picks
Ken Kitano: "one day"
11 July - 8 August 2009
MEM
(Osaka)
Kitano photographed the landscapes in his "one day" series by exposing the film for an entire day, from sunrise to sunset. In his photo of Mt. Fuji the sun describes an arc of light that plunges into the mountain, while the crowds of people hurrying through his cityscapes disappear almost entirely, leaving behind only surreal traces of themselves. Rather than excising instants of time, Kitano allows it to accumulate, creating a mystical space in the process.
picks
Norimizu Ameya: Sannin Iru! (Three People Here!)
31 July - 12 August 2009
Little more
(Tokyo)
Someone else who claims to be the protagonist appears in the room. Then a third person appears making the same claim. The plot thickens. It's a simple premise, but we never find out why there are two, or even three, selves. Billed as a theater performance that is simultaneously an art exhibit, an installation, even a musical event, Ameya's staging of Junnosuke Tada's play, with its meta-drama and meta-roles, seems to be devised for the purpose of playing with the essentials of theater.
picks
Studio Ghibli Layout Designs
25 July - 12 October 2009
Suntory Museum
(Osaka)
This show finally opened in Osaka a year after making a huge splash at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo. Once again one is impressed above all by the vast number of pictures that must be drawn to provide the layouts (the original sketches comprising the blueprint) for a single animation film. Creator of Hayao Miyazaki's masterpieces, Studio Ghibli here displays some 1,300 layouts from those productions. The proof of animation genius, it would appear, is found not so much in artistic quality as in sheer quantity.
picks
Nyokyu Makishima: Place for God and Buddha
25 July - 23 August 2009
Mitaka City Gallery of Art
(Tokyo)
This thorough retrospective of the idiosyncratic religious painter Nyokyu Makishima (1892-1975) demonstrates the extent to which he blended Eastern and Western art techniques (he used both oils and sumi ink) as well as Christian and Buddhist imagery. Makishima studied iconography at an Orthodox Christian seminary in Tokyo, but eventually came to view God and Buddha as one, and in many of his works both deities coexist in the same frame. Though his sumi brushwork is not much to write home about, his touch with oil is downright seductive.
picks
Chim Pom: FujiYAMA, GEISHA, JAPAnEse!!
26 July - 8 August 2009
Mujin-to Production
(Tokyo)

The notoriously irreverent art unit Chim Pom here tackles the theme of Japanese stereotypes seen through the eyes of foreigners. Unfortunately the installation packs little punch overall, provoking neither thought nor laughter. Its sole saving grace is that, when you poke your head out the gallery window, you see team member Mizuno perched in full Ninja regalia, striking a valiant pose atop a building on the other side of the Chuo Line tracks. Otherwise, however, there is nothing to goose the preconceptions or the funny bone of the audience, whether Japanese or foreign.

picks
Akira Nishitake: White Asparagus and Polatouche
31 July - 12 August 2009
AD&A Gallery
(Osaka)

Nishitake has festooned the gallery walls with scads of pen and ink drawings featuring goblin-like characters and, occasionally, repetitions of abstract patterns. The beauty of his lines is more than enough to draw the viewer in. The computer-manipulated drawings in the second-floor gallery, on the other hand, still appear to be in the experimental stage.

picks
Satoshi Someya: OKEMONO
4 August - 5 September 2009
imura art gallery
(Kyoto)

Arms, legs and a torso protrude from a lacquer bowl . . . objects of this sort make up most of Someya's oeuvre. The medium is lacquer and the techniques are traditional ones like maki-e (lacquer sprinkled with gold or silver powder) and raden (lacquer inlaid with shell), but the motifs are a crazy quilt of manga-like characters, bizarre creatures, random Kanji, and other odds and ends. Someya's work exudes an odor of kitsch, but his blend of traditional technique with a contemporary sensibility makes it unique.

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Dojima River Biennale 2009 - "Reflection: The World through Art"
8 August - 6 September 2009
Dojima River Forum
(Osaka)

Mori Art Museum director Fumio Nanjo served as artistic director of the 2006 and 2008 Singapore Biennale, from which he has selected 26 works for this biennale by the Dojima River in downtown Osaka. All carry some sort of political or social message, and the dominant medium is film, exemplified by Ecuadoran Tomas Ochoa's take on the collision between Christianity and Islam, and Palestinian Suha Shoman's fierce critique of the Palestine problem. The high quality of the works shown is accentuated by the excellent sound and lighting of the venue.

picks
The Face of Another
12 August - 18 September 2009
Laputa Asagaya
(Tokyo)

This screening of filmmaker Hiroshi Teshigahara's 1966 masterpiece was part of an event featuring the film music of composer Toru Takemitsu. An artistic tour-de-force, The Face of Another boasted Takemitsu's music, a screenplay by original author Kobo Abe, art by Arata Isozaki and Masao Yamazaki, and the "Ear" sculptures of Tomio Miki. The theme running through this story of a man who covers his disfigured face with a lifelike mask is a paranoid obsession with the parts of the body; the thrill is in seeing how the film sadistically dissects the "face" of humanity to lay bare the darkness and turmoil beneath.

picks
Nao Tsuda: Hate-no-Rera (Winds at the Extremities)
11 July - 16 August 2009
Ichinomiya City Memorial Art Museum of Setsuko Migishi
(Aichi)

Tsuda's new series of photographs was taken at the extremities of the Japanese archipelago: Rebun island off the northern coast of Hokkaido (rera is the Ainu word for wind) and Hateruma island at the southern end of the Okinawa chain. Tsuda's quest for his own coordinates on the axis between these two poles resonates well with other, earlier series displayed here like "Shichiyo," on the theme of premodern Japanese cosmology, and "Distant Stars," which creates a starry sky by burning holes in washi paper with an incense stick. Tsuda's intensely meditative approach to photography is on full display throughout.

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