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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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17 January 2011 |
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Tomoko Nagai: Winter Wind and Konko |
17 December 2010 - 5 February 2011 |
Tomio Koyama Gallery Kyoto, TKG Editions Kyoto
(Kyoto) |
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Bears, cats, deer, young girls and various imaginary creatures appear as colorful motifs scattered throughout Nagai's paintings of fanciful worlds. The artist, who says she never makes preliminary sketches, chooses to work with pastels, color pencils, watercolors or oils according to her subject. Held concurrently in two different venues at the Koyama gallery building in Kyoto, the show includes wall paintings and installations. |
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Mimi Yokoo: Painting |
18 October - 13 November 2010 |
Nantenshi Gallery (Tokyo) |
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This is Mimi Yokoo's first show at the Nantenshi since 2007. Framed in white boxes and festooned with food models, figures, syrup bottles and the like, her depictions of food -- her favorite motif -- are more objects than paintings. Yokoo's pointillistic style reveals a level of technique superior to that of her famous father Tadanori. |
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Yume Akasaka: Miniature garden |
25 October - 6 November 2010
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ASK? art space kimura
(Tokyo) |
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Appropriately enough for an artist whose name, Yume, is a homonym for "dream," Akasaka produces truly dreamlike animations, created from still photos, in which bird, fish and butterfly images flit whitely across the walls of the darkened gallery. Particularly masterful is her use of two basement walls that form a right angle, across which her images change as they shift from wall to wall -- a contemporary version of the "Metamorphoses" myths. |
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Ai Kitahara: Building for One
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23 October - 14 November 2010
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Gallery Simon
(Kanagawa) |
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This solo show in Yokohama by Paris-based Kitahara features drawings and sculptures she created while in residence at a former psychiatric hospital in Orleans, France. Pen and pencil line drawings of the rooms depict the hospital interior in monochrome, with colors visible only through the windows. Inspired by the fact that the hospital was once crammed with patients, her work "Building for One" represents the space occupied by one person as a sphere in which circles intersect one another at right angles. |
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Saburo Aso
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9 November - 19 December 2010
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The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (Tokyo) |
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Even as he kept one foot in the establishment world of "Western-style" Japanese painting and official group exhibitions, Aso (1913-2000) was part of a new breed of pre- and postwar artists who contributed to the evolution of contemporary art in Japan. Though of the last generation devoted to the expression of an individual "attitude toward life," the fact that he continued painting long after the war makes him more difficult for academics to pigeonhole as a modernist than, say, Ai-Mitsu, a less fortunate colleague who died right after the war. |
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Taiji Matsue: survey of time |
23 October - 20 November 2010 |
Taro Nasu
(Tokyo) |
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This show brings together 15 still photographs from Matsue's earliest work, the 1987 series "TRANSIT," and seven video works from his latest project, "survey of time." The 35-mm streetscape snapshots of "TRANSIT," which marked his debut as a solo exhibitor, betray his adoration of Daido Moriyama. The more recent "survey of time" is an ambitious, challenging work that reverses the roles of still and video photography, reexamining the process of "seeing" things. |
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