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Picks is a monthly sampling of Japan's art scene, offering commentary by a variety of reviewers about exhibitions at museums and galleries in recent weeks, with an emphasis on contemporary art by young artists. |
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Masao Horino: Vision of the Modernist |
6 March - 6 May 2012 |
Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography
(Tokyo) |
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Horino (1907-98) was arguably Japan's first truly "professional" photographer, an artisan who devoted himself full-time to the medium. With over 200 works on display, this show testifies to his acute eye for subject and composition, his superlative developing and printing technique, and his layout and design skills as well. It is also an opportunity to see the fruits of the exhaustive efforts by the museum's crack team of researchers, led by Ryuichi Kaneko, to track down many long-forgotten or missing links in Horino's oeuvre. Indeed, the exhibition represents a significant milestone in Japanese photographic history. |
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Nobuyoshi Araki Photobook Exhibition: Arākī |
11 March - 29 July 2012 |
Izu Photo Museum
(Shizuoka) |
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During his long and provocative career, Araki has published over 400 photography books -- some kind of world record. This ambitious show displays them all, as well as such treats as a giant portfolio presentation of Satchin and His Brother Mabo (1963), his entire Arakinema slideshow series, and his latest opus, a response to the March 11 disaster titled '11.3.11. "Ara¯ki¯," incidentally, is a play on the photographer's name and the Japanese pronunciation of "anarchy." |
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Hiroshi Sugimoto: From naked to clothed |
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Hara Museum of Contemporary Art
(Tokyo) |
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Protean artist Sugimoto's current outing revolves around clothing. The centerpiece is his Stylized Sculpture series of photos of the fashions of such luminaries as Coco Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, and Rei Kawakubo. Not content with this, however, Sugimoto throws in past photo series and items from his personal art collection to round out what is ostensibly a retrospective look at the entire panoply of human civilization, viewed through the prism of dress -- or lack of it. |
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Morikazu Kumagai: Infinite World in a Small Frame |
14 April - 27 May 2012
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Itami City Museum of Art
(Hyogo) |
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Kumagai (1880-1977) painted vividly colored, sharply outlined portraits of plants, insects, cats, and birds. Extending from his best-known works to some that were only recently unearthed, this ambitious show brings together 144 oils, 26 Nihonga paintings, and ten works of calligraphy. Kumagai painted most of his oils on 24 x 33 cm canvases, but as the subtitle suggests, those modest dimensions encompass entire worlds. The retrospective adds up to an in-depth portrait of an artist who, throughout his seven-decade career, faithfully adhered to what became known as the "Morikazu Style." |
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Tomio Seike: Overlook |
2 March - 28 April 2012
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Photo Gallery International
(Tokyo) |
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Seike's photography has earned him more acclaim in the West than in his homeland. In a departure from his past devotion to monochrome prints, these new works are inkjet-printed color images shot with a digital camera. As the title hints, this is a series of views overlooking the sea from a somewhat elevated perspective. True to Seike's reputation to date, the compositions are technically superb in execution and sublimely tranquil in mood. |
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