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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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Fuminao Suenaga: Unknown Sculpture Series No.7 #6: Generic Object |
11 - 28 January 2018
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Gallery21yo-j
(Tokyo) |
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Sixteen cinderblocks of the type used to build walls are laid out on the floor at a diagonal in two rows of eight each. As one might surmise from the title, this is the ultimate generic block wall -- the latest such offering by Suenaga, who likes to turn all kinds of rectangular objects into "pictures" (or in this case, since they stand on the floor, "sculptures"). His materials are everyday items, which he places on walls, floors, or wall-floor interfaces -- typical habitats of paintings or sculptures. |
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Fragments of Graphism: An Alternative History of Graphic Design in Japan |
23 January - 22 February 2018
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Creation Gallery G8
(Tokyo) |
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This attempt to reinterpret and reconstruct the history of 20th-century graphic design in Japan took its cues from Idea, a journal that has covered graphic design both here and abroad since its launch in 1953. Built around a comprehensive design timeline, the exhibits displayed the fruits of some intriguing thematic research by 13 cutting-edge designers in their thirties or forties. With some highly idiosyncratic views of that history on parade, it was like getting a glimpse of each designer's bookshelf. |
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Shiko Munakata & Soetsu Yanagi |
11 January - 25 March 2018 |
The Japan Folk Crafts Museum
(Tokyo) |
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Every artist needs a producer, and the relationship between woodblock artist and Munakata and Mingei movement leader Yanagi certainly bears this out. No artist, however talented, can view his own work with complete objectivity. That's where the producer comes in -- someone who can judge the quality of a work and prod the artist to reach his personal best. Yanagi was not only Munakata's producer but also his patron, the man responsible for sowing the seeds of the artist's global reputation. |
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Paintings: Here And Now |
13 January - 25 February 2018 |
Fuchu Art Museum
(Tokyo) |
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This group show featured seven painters born between the 1960s and 1980s. The eldest, Mio Shirai, creates works with classical coloring and composition that are brightly poppish yet provocatively unbalanced. Miyuki Tsugami paints from life in Fuchu city proper. Tomoko Fukushi draws airplane motifs manga-style on whiteboard. Shunsuke Imai creates his images on a computer, then transplants them to canvas. Aki Kondo engages in extreme deformations of human, animal and plant figures that somehow please the eye.
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Toru Kuwakubo: A Calendar for Painters Without Time Sense 1. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8 |
20 January - 17 February 2018 |
Tomio Koyama Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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Six big paintings, each nearly two meters square, depict the fancied "studios" of as many masters, all in outdoor settings with the sea as a backdrop. They resemble a contemporary version of the "gallery paintings" of the past, commissioned by wealthy collectors to depict the works they owned in lieu of catalogs. Also on display are pencil drawings of each composition, to which Kuwakubo has appended calendar pages for particular months. As a giant among giants, Picasso is given pride of place as the January artist. Each calendar month is further augmented by its own LP record of music by Riki Hidaka.
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