Ono Garou

As a follow-up to the contemporary art galleries in the industrial unit, yesterday Ami took me to several art galleries in Ginza.

ono garou

ono garou

My favourite was Ono Garou. One of the artists told us this is the oldest building in Ginza – an area associated with expensive shopping – and I can well believe it.

ono garou hallway

Formerly an apartment building, it is fairly crumbly inside and now inhabited by artists. Most of the rooms (typically about 2.5m square) are individual gallery spaces, even the old bath room!

ono garou mailboxes

We spent most time in the two basement spaces.

TYPE-TRACE, part of divvydual teased out ideas about language, authorship and production: three sets of laptops, chairs and projectors where visitors were invited to type their thoughts whilst having the process of their typing logged. The document was then played back in real time with letterforms having differing sizing depending on how long it took before the corresponding key had been pressed.

http://spinn-aker.co.jp/kobo/t-guide.htm
www.inexhale.net
www.phonethica.net
www.tokyoartbeat.com

Next to the room bathed in the cold light from the monitors and projectors was the work of Saito Juichi. Dressed formally in suit, tie and white cotton gloves, the artist welcomed visitors at an equally formally dressed table outside his space. With soft voice and great solemnity we were then shown into what is essentially the cupboard under the stairs.

Only being able to stand upright immediately inside the door, we then had to stoop and shuffle over the rabbit pelts to view the sculpture at the far end that also provided the only lighting in the space.

Marvellous.

saito

Once outside and back at the table again, we were ushered through the process of signing our names (with a fountain pen, naturally) on visitors cards that were then put away in a lidded box.

Shortly afterwards we returned and, with Ami’s help with translation, Saito-san became the first person in Japan invited to participate in the Peer-to-Peer Sketchbooks project.

Spiral

After going to Kiyosumishirakawa we went to Spiral in/near Omotesando. I was really keen to see Spiral having already come across their Independent Creators Festival via Ami’s work.

spiral

Music shop, coffee shop, gift shop and Lumps and Bumps by lang/bauman in the atrium:

lumps

bumps

above

Kiyosumishirakawa

Kiyosumishirakawa

A few days ago a friend took me to see some galleries in the Kiyosumishirakawa area of downtown Tokyo.

cement factory

industrial unit

Tucked in between a cement factory and a taxi ranch, is a building that houses a dispatch warehouse, a lighting manufacturer and, oh, 3 floors of commercial galleries!

3 floors of galleries

After finding your way past the palettes to the industrially sized lift, you come out in a slightly different world of pristine white cubes! (ie the type of place you’re blatantly not going to be allowed to take any photos…)

pallettes

white cubes

There was a real mix of contemporary artists being represented: Japanese, international, emerging and more established. We even came across a Damien Hurst in one of the galleries!

entrance

Other than the complete serendipity of walking out of the lift, I think the nicest touch for me was the little reception desk just inside the entrance that just sort of pulled the whole thing together.

www.tomiokoyamagallery.com
www.shugoarts.com
www.zenshi.com
www.takaishiigallery.com
www.hiromiyoshii.com

lump

Because she is

pregnant

this week I have mostly been smearing my friend with Vaseline and flicking stuff at her:

geidai

Yesterday I went to the festival of Tokyo University of Music and Arts (Geidai) in Ueno.
http://www.geidai.ac.jp/english/index.html

Part open day:

…part exhibition:

… part car boot sale:

…and part barbeque and music festival:

a good time was had by all!

The students kept asking me how it compared to festivals in the UK, and I had to say that I’d never seen anything like this in the UK. But then maybe my experiences in Bournville aren’t particularly representative.

I tried asking them what the festival was for and who came etc etc. It seems that many students from all the other Tokyo art universities come to these things, as well as families of Geidai students. In addition to showing and selling some of their work, each department has its own batch of beer and food stalls as well as two or three student bands playing throughout the evening. After which, apparently it is traditional for the students to decide to go for a swim in the pond of the nearby park.

Now that part at least sounds familiar!

cartography

An idea arrives completely out of the blue; you spend weeks thinking that it’s arrived completely out of the blue; and then one morning whilst in the shower suddenly you can point back to loads of influences that produced the idea…

ISP draw our network workshop:

ISP network diagram

Degree show thinking network diagrams:

http://www.visualcomplexity.com/vc/index.cfm

Open planning:

data flow diagram

We are the artists:

We Are The Artists

http://www.wearetheartists.net/

Conversations about conversations and inviting along someone you want to have a conversation with.

closed

Following on from this, I’m very much interested in the process of remote selection: the idea that once I send off a piece of work to this fax machine I have no further control over it. Particularly that work may or may not get selected for display (by whatever means) at all.

I’ve devised a series of computer-controlled processes that I will use to exagerate this process of arbitrary selection and rejection. I will submit works to it and then these will get filtered in a fairly random manner before being faxed off to Manchester.

The automated aspect of this needs some computing resources I don’t have with this particular set-up so things are stalled at the moment whilst I try and get those sorted. Let’s hope the un-announced close date for the show is a little way off yet…

open

I’ve been trying to chart the processes involved in the forthcoming [insertspace] show, Open.

It’s hellishly difficult/complicated:

process diagram for Open

Participation in the project basically involves submitting artwork by fax to the MILL-WORKERS space in Manchester. From here your work is completely in the hands of the MILL-WORKERS tenants…

Whether it gets displayed/whether is gets destroyed/how it gets displayed/when it gets displayed etc etc.

I gave up on the data flow diagram too:

data flow diagram for Open

Obviously the only sensible way to respond is by making the process even more convoluted…

what is art?

From the glossary of Relational Aesthetics, Nicolas Bourriaud:

Art
  1. General term describing a set of objects presented as part of a narrative known as art history. This narrative draws up the critical genealogy and discusses the issues raised by these objects, by way of three sub-sets: painting, sculpture and architecture.
  2. Nowadays, the word ‘art’ seems to be no more than a semantic leftover of this narrative, whose more accurate definition would read as follows: Art is an activity consisting in producing relationships with the world with the help of signs, forms, actions and objects.

The first of these definitions is utterly pragmatic; the second screams towards the target, hits the bulls-eye and quivers for a few moments whilst the repercussions reverberate out into the surroundings…

vitamin creative space

(Follows on from this post.)

if you're sitting comfortably...

beanbags and tv

Through Popular Expression
at: International Project Space, Bournville
curated by: vitamin creative space



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