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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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16 January 2017 |
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Mitsugu Ohnishi: Newcoast |
2 November - 22 December 2016 |
Photo Gallery International (PGI)
(Tokyo) |
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Since the 1980s, Ohnishi has clearly been influenced by the New American Color photographers of preceding decades; like them he utilizes the brilliant sheen and expressive detail of color photography to chronicle the ever-changing social landscape of his homeland. Three or more decades later, we can see that those works contained a wealth of guideposts to the deepest strata of their times. |
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Yuna Tsuru: Living like Water, Living with Water |
12 - 27 November 2016 |
ex-chamber museum
(Tokyo) |
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Evidently inspired by John Everett Millais's Ophelia, these are all paintings of women in water. Though they belong to the photorealist genre, they are not mere mechanical tracings of photographs. Rather they retain, in the best sense, an aura of dreamy unreality. The artist's devotion to a particular motif is also refreshing. |
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The Art of Zen: From Mind to Form |
18 October - 27 November 2016 |
Tokyo National Museum
(Tokyo) |
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Portraits of priests and warlords . . . sculptures and calligraphy by Zen Buddhist masters . . . nothing in this show is terribly enlightening, until one comes to a portrait of the priest Nanpo Shomyo. Flaking pigment reveals another painting beneath, giving the subject four eyes and two mouths. Not only that, but except for the face, the painting is identical to an adjacent work, an older portrait of the Chinese Zen master Xutang Zhiyu. Like playing at dolls with interchangeable wardrobes, it would appear that Zen painters were not averse to expedient substitutions -- replace the face and Bob's your uncle. |
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Amazing Show Tents in Japan |
8 September - 29 November 2016 |
National Museum of Ethnology
(Osaka) |
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There is plenty to titillate the mind here: freak-show tent signboards; acrobatic stunts; female sumo wrestling; basketry and seashell craftwork depicting humans and animals; mechanical dolls; "living" dolls; mummified mermaids . . . All exude the odor of contrivance, but that's as it should be. In our postmodern age, freak shows and the like seem barely a hair's breadth away from art, and enchant people just as convincingly. |
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Takehiro Terabayashi: LIFE III |
25 November - 18 December 2016 |
Yoshimi Arts
(Osaka) |
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Apartment stairs, kitchens, light fixtures, switches, frayed tatami mats -- Terabayashi paints the things he sees every day. These ten paintings, of various dimensions, are life-sized, meticulous renderings of the objects around him. If this is photorealism, it's an extreme variant that obsessively reproduces every stain and smudge on the walls. "Hyperrealism," perhaps? |
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