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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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FujiFilm "Only One" Photo Collection |
17 January - 5 February 2014 |
FujiFilm Square
(Tokyo) |
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An exhibition of 101 works by 101 Japanese photographers. Chronologically they extend from Felice Beato's "Nagasaki, Nakashima River" of 1865 to Hiroh Kikai's "Celebrating Shichi-go-san" of 2001. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the decades of the 1960s and 1970s form a zenith of sorts. |
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Toward a Design Museum Japan |
25 October 2013 - 9 February 2014 |
21_21 DESIGN SIGHT
(Tokyo) |
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Designer and museum director Issey Miyake and Commissioner for Cultural Affairs Masanori Aoyagi launched the Society for a Design Museum Japan in the fall of 2012 with a public symposium on the state of design museums in this country. This recent show picked up where the symposium left off, reviewing the exhibitions presented by 21_21 DESIGN SIGHT since it opened in 2007 as well as contemplating the role of design museums in the 21st century. |
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The "shiseido art egg vol. 8" Exhibition: Shunsuke Kano |
10 January - 2 February 2014 |
Shiseido Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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The eighth installment of this year's "shiseido art egg" program, which introduces up-and-coming young artists, is devoted to 3D artist Kano, whose work comes close to defying description. In a high-ceilinged gallery, small objects combine to form a very large one that exudes an aura of infinite expansion. Kano's talent for matching materials, scale, and a certain street sense makes him an artist worth watching. |
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Manabu Numata: Tracing the Surface 2 |
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Shinjuku Gankagarou
(Tokyo)
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In these 107 photo-portraits, men and women stare at the camera with only the whites of their eyes visible. Rolling one's eyes back is a phenomenon that occurs in the course of transporting oneself from the day-to-day to the extraordinary, the non-quotidian. Numata has his models act out this state of suspension between two worlds; the "surface" of the title is presumably that interface or boundary. The subjects' pupil-less eyes appear to be scrutinizing us as we cross back and forth over our own interface with the extreme information space that is Tokyo. |
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Ryusuke Kido |
7 - 28 January 2014 |
LIXIL Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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"Light switches" made out of various colors of incense are arranged on a square table. On another table lies a pistol composed of ashes. Nearby, blocks of incense are stacked like buildings in a city. Kido's installation reeks of transience -- the inevitable return of the sturdiest objects to ashes and dust. |
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The tiger runs around and becomes butter. |
7 - 28 January 2014 |
Koganecho Site-A Gallery
(Kanagawa) |
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Situated under the Keikyu Railway tracks in Yokohama's Koganecho district, Site-A recently featured four thirty-ish artists: Takuma Ikeda, Koichiro Kobayashi, Yuko Saka, and Kazuaki Yamane. Among them, Yamane's work stood out for his scrutiny of the gray area between value and worthlessness in a consumer society. One work consisted simply of a dollar bill pinned to the wall with a seal saying "$9.99" affixed to it. We've all seen "art" in this vein before, but it was gratifying to be reminded of that particular vein again. |
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Kota Kishi: Rubbish and Photography |
20 January - 2 February 2014 |
photographers' gallery/ Kula Photo Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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Kishi has devoted the last few years to works that force photographs and physical objects into uneasy couplings. He is particularly enamored with rubble, as in his Barracks (2012) series, for which he mounted photos on slabs of scrap wood or plastic picked up at the sites of demolished buildings, and Things in There (2013), featuring images of objects encountered in towns devastated by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami. For this show he brought a printer to the gallery, printed copies of images (including new works) from Barracks onto straw paper, and bound them into photo-collection books, which he sold on-site. |
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Kengo Nakamura: Ourselves in Today's World |
14 January - 1 February 2014 |
Megumi Ogita Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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The English title of this show is somewhat prosaic; the Japanese title, which roughly translates as "Heart-Text Correspondence," better reflects what Nakamura is getting at here. His motifs are emoticons, which cover his canvases in abstract compositions that recall Klee and Kandinsky in their use of color and pattern. But his media of choice are the traditional pigments, paper, and techniques of Nihonga. In the sense that emoticons are devised to convey the texter's feelings to the textee as directly as possible, these works are indeed about striving for a correspondence between symbol and content. |
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