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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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Fuji Paradigms: Visions of Mt. Fuji |
17 January - 5 July 2015 |
Izu Photo Museum
(Shizuoka) |
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For a museum located at the foot of the iconic peak, an exhibition devoted to Mt. Fuji sounds inevitable. The Izu Photo Museum has lived up to its mandate with a thoroughgoing show divided into two parts. The first examines how images of the mountain became fixed in the public imagination with the advent of photography in Japan at the end of the Shogunate, in the mid-19th century. The second introduces photos and films by Masanao Abe, a resident of nearby Gotenba who devoted years to taking fixed-point, time-lapse photos of cloud formations over Fuji from his own Cloud and Air Current Research Laboratory. |
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PARASOPHIA: Kyoto International Festival of Contemporary Culture |
7 March - 10 May 2015
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Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, The Museum of Kyoto, others
(Kyoto) |
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This was the debut of an ambitious contemporary art event that sprawled across seven venues in the ancient capital. Some 40 artists from Japan and abroad participated, among them Emiko Kasahara, Yasumasa Morimura, Koki Tanaka, Cai Guo-Qiang, Pipilotti Rist, and Danh Vo. Seeking to distinguish itself from the regional artfests that are so in vogue these days, the festival announced no defining theme, instead encouraging the artists to autonomously develop new works on-site over the past year or so. |
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Really Realistic Reality: Artists of Wakayama and Kansai |
14 March - 10 May 2015
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The Museum of Modern Art, Wakayama
(Wakayama) |
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The five artists featured here (Aya Ito, Yohei Okubo, Ichiro Okada, Kumpei, and Yutaka Koyanagi) were all born in the 70s or 80s and hail from Wakayama or make their home in the surrounding Kansai region. Using diverse methods and materials, all of them create works that give form to polarities: the genuine vs. the fake, the ordinary vs. the extraordinary, micro vs. macro, reality vs. delusion. |
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APPLE+ Learning to Design, Designing to Learn: Ken Miki |
5 - 31 March 2015 |
ginza graphic gallery (ggg)
(Tokyo) |
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Designer Ken Miki is also a professor at Osaka University of Arts, where he gave his first-year students the homework assignment of "apple." We may be familiar with the apple as a concept, but how well do we know it in "real" terms? The assignment was to observe an apple, draw it, and finally, eat it; the resulting exhibition serves as one model for design education. |
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