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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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1 February 2019 |
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Travels with Glasses: Exploring Visual Culture |
23 November 2018 - 27 January 2019 |
Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art
(Shizuoka) |
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Megane (glasses) was the keyword for this exhibition, which examined how people have manipulated or enhanced the sense of sight in the modern era. Starting with the Edo-era megane-e (optique pictures) that used a convex lens and perspective drawing techniques to produce 3D views, and moving on to inventions like the railroad, airplane, microscope and telescope that made the macro and micro worlds visible for the first time, the show brought us up to date with virtual-reality technology and contemporary art that utilizes visual tricks. |
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Motoyuki Daifu: "untitled (surround)" |
2 December 2018 - 20 January 2019 |
Misako & Rosen
(Tokyo) |
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The centerpiece of this solo show was a series of photographs of Daifu's family neighborhood in the Yokohama suburbs. The images share a unified tone and a casual compositional style like his earlier portrayals of home interiors and still lifes. However, these new works also exude an off-kilter aura that stems from the skewed uniformity, and the commonplace character of the resulting details, in the contemporary Japanese suburban architecture that is his subject.
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Tomoko Sawada: Kageboshi |
1 - 28 December 2018 |
MEM
(Tokyo) |
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Photographer Sawada's latest work is a video piece titled Kageboshi, meaning shadow or silhouette. Running for 4 minutes 31 seconds in a loop, it begins with the appearance of an indistinct human shadow on a white surface with the rough texture of washi paper. After a bit, the shadow gradually fades away, to be followed by several more such phantoms appearing and disappearing in succession. It's an elegantly simple concept that stimulates the viewer's imagination in somewhat unnerving fashion.
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Kiyotaka Tsurisaki: Days of the Dead |
14 - 26 December 2018 |
Shinjuku Ophthalmologist (Ganka) Gallery
(Tokyo) |
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Since 1994 Tsurisaki has been photographing the dead in places like Thailand, Mexico, Colombia, Russia, and Palestine, as well as Japan. The corpses appear in diverse circumstances -- suicide, murder, traffic accidents, mortuaries, forensic labs. Tsurisaki views them all with a cool, objective eye, keeping aesthetic or emotional gestures to a minimum. This show, held in tandem with the publication of his photo collection The Dead, offered a selection of 20 prints from the 180 in the book. |
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