Chikaku, Time and Memory in Japan

Chikaku, Time and Memory in Japan

Kunsthaus Graz / Camera Austria

Yutaka Sone, Green Jungle, 1999, Courtesy of Sammlung Hauser und Wirth, Photo: David Zwirner Gallery, New York

June 3, 2005

Chikaku
Time and Memory in Japan

June 04 - September 11, 2005
Opening: June 04, 2005, 11 a.m.

Kunsthaus Graz and Camera Austria
Lendkai 1
8020 Graz
Austria
Opening hours: Tue-Sun 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thu 10a.m.-8 p.m.

www.kunsthausgraz.at

A comprehensive exhibition by Kunsthaus Graz and Camera Austria entitled Chikaku. Time and Memory in Japan, reflecting the dynamic development of Japanese art during recent decades.

The exhibition focuses on the topics of perception (Japanese Chikaku), time and memory. Concentrating on these topics and in collaboration with Adam Budak and Seiichi Furuya, the art scientist Toshiharu Ito defines afresh what are for Japanese art some highly characteristic positions, albeit scarcely presented together until now.

The spatial concept that was developed especially for Kunsthaus Graz offers altogether appropriate circumstances for pursuing the manifold and winding paths of contemporary artistic expression. Makoto Sei Watanabe, one of the most important contemporary Japanese architects, is responsible for the exhibition design.

The exhibition includes contemporary art, photography, video/film, media art and architecture. It casts new light on the complex shades and dimensions of Japanese art, visualises connections between works from various epochs and genres, creating new relations. Last but not least, this multi-layered approach sketches out links and interdependencies that had scarcely been traced until now.

Modern Japanese art was created under the complex influence of brisk modernisation and rapid technological progress. In the course of this development it exhibited an essential relation to the problems of society in dealing with technology and the environment, the latter being of global importance today.

The exhibition formulates new discursive approaches, analysing the validity of the aesthetic values of the west in the face of our extremely complex present, determined by dramatic changes in the realm of media and communication systems and a growing dependency on technology. Chikaku. Time and Memory in Japan aims at nothing less than a rethinking of the importance and rich variety of possibilities borne by art in the 21st century.

Exhibition
With works by Masaki Fujihata, Rieko Hidaka, Takashi Ito, Emiko Kasahara, Tadashi Kawamata, Motohiko Odani, Yayoi Kusama, Hiroyuki Moriwaki, Daido Moriyama, Takuma Nakahira, Tetsuya Nakamura, Taro Okamoto, Yoko Ono, Yutaka Sone, Yoshihiro Suda, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Makoto Sei Watanabe, Masaaki Yamada and Miwa Yanagi.

Film programme
In the context of the exhibition there will be a series of events with films and video works from and about Japan by artists including Trinh T. Minh-ha, Teinosuke Kinugasa, Sumiko Haneda, Takahiko Iimura, Yoko Ono, Paolo Rocha and Manfred Neuwirth. The series will be curated by the German film theoretician Olaf Möller.

Competition
Under the auspices of the Graz Art Media Competition, protagonists from different disciplines were invited to put together a project for the Kunsthaus Graz BIX façade. The jury comprising Toshiharu Ito, Hiroyuki Moriwaki, Miki Okabe, Makoto Sei Watanabe, Adam Budak, Christine Frisinghelli and Peter Pakesch has two prizes to award. The Peter Cook Prize is awarded by the architect of the Kunsthaus. The prize-winners works will be shown as part of Chikaku.

Catalogue
A comprehensive and richly illustrated catalogue in English and German accompanies the exhibition with contributions from Ryuta Imafuku, Toshiharu Ito, Olaf Möller, Yoko Tawada, Makoto Sei Watanabe, Krystyna Wilkoszewska along with a foreword by The Japan Foundation and an introduction by Christine Frisinghelli and Peter Pakesch.

In collaboration with The Japan Foundation.

Curator: Toshiharu Ito (Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, Tokyo)

In collaboration with: Adam Budak (Kunsthaus Graz), Seiichi Furuya (Camera Austria), Miki Okabe (The Japan Foundation)

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June 3, 2005

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