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"Mediarena": Govett-Brewster Art Gallery.


Since the '90s successes of Mariko Mori's flawless digital fantasies of technofemininity and Takashi Marakami's animederived subjects, the Japanese art Japanese art, works of art created in the islands that make up the nation of Japan.

Early Works



The earliest art of Japan, probably dating from the 3d and 2d millennia B.C., consisted of monochrome pottery with cord-impressed designs (Jomon), also the name for the early period of Japanese art. Later Jomon (1000–300 B.C.) finds include bone earrings, blades of ivory and horn, lacquer objects, and small clay figurines.
 most widely exhibited abroad has conformed to two easily generalized types: high-tech and neo-Pop. Carefully weighted against the expectations produced by this export history, "Mediarena: Contemporary Art from Japan," a survey of current practice from the Kanto and Kansai regions (centered on Tokyo and Osaka), energetically displayed a more complex spectrum of media and artistic modes, partly by locating recent work in a lineage of action-based art. Thus curators Fumio Nanjo (deputy director of the Mori Art Museum), Roger McDonald (deputy director of Arts Initiative Tokyo), and Gregory Burke (director of Govett-Brewster) included Yayoi Kusama as an established reference point alongside Tatsuo Miyajima's equally iconic digital counting pieces.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Kusama's relentlessly personal, ritualistic practice and Miyajima's Zen interests resonate with work like Tadasu Takamine's God Bless America, 2002, for example, a video projection in which he and collaborators are shown in stop-motion time--eighteen days boiled down into a couple of renditions of the title song--living their daily lives around and thereby animating a clay head as tall as a person. While the head's squeaky singing acknowledges the urgency to the question of what "America" means in the age of Empire (following Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri), it does so in a way that is not stridently political--the artist's sex life, sleep, and meal times visibly aren't put aside in the face of this concern, after all. Ultimately the work doesn't affirm but demonstrates a discomfort with the cliche of Japan's fascination with American culture.

Takamine's attention to intersections of lived experience and art is emblematic of an exhibition that kept both in view in a number of ways, from the social project work of Noboru Tsubaki's Radikal Carbon, 2004, for which he built kilns to produce the sustainable energy resource bamboo charcoal during his residency in New Plymouth New Plymouth, city (1996 pop. 48,871), West Coast North Island, New Zealand, on the Tasman Sea. It is a port and a major center for dairying. Other industries include natural gas processing and metal working. (New Zealand's "energy capital," home to natural gas reserves), to a program of art and club culture crossover events, including cabaret rock stars Gorgerous and Tokyo underground VJ VJ - General Utility Squadron (US Navy aviation unit designation used from 1925 to 1946)
VJ - Navy Utility Squadron (US Navy aviation unit designation used from 1920s to 1960s)
VJ - Photographic Squadron (US Navy aviation unit designation used from 1952 to 1956)
VJ - Utility Squadron (US Navy aviation unit designation used from 1925 to 1946)
VJ - Van Jacobsen (compression technique named for its inventor)
/DJs Numb and exonomo.

The performative thread was sustained by the predominance of moving-image work in the gallery, including performance videos by Kusama, Makoto Aida, and Saki

Saki, pseudonym of Hector Hugh Munro

Saki: see Munro, Hector Hugh.

saki, in zoology

saki: see monkey.
 Satom; the eight-artist video program "Replay"; Tabaimo's interactive animation Japanese Interior, 2002; and Motohiko Odani's lurid, digitally constructed videos Caterpillar, 2003, and Rompers, 2003. Both technology and tradition--as represented by the visual tropes TROPE - Trial Ocean Prediction Experiment of geisha and kawati style, for instance--were predictably but effectively shown up for their hidden violence. Wish-fulfillment fantasies indistinguishable from mysteriously symbolic nightmares, Odani's scenarios provoke a thorough ambivalence, suggesting the dark side of being able--digitally--to get anything you want; while Tabaimo and Aida employ traditional drawing and print-making styles to reveal flashes of abusive, cannibalistic, and suicidal urges in the highly groomed world of salarymen and uniformed schoolgirls. While such legibly Japanese concerns may at first appear pitched to a foreign audience, their very expectedness may be part of what artists based in Japan are concerned to work through, perhaps especially when art is conceived as a lived process rather than something to produce a transportable or transmittable finished image.
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Title Annotation:NEW PLYMOUTH, NEW ZEALAND
Author:Bywater, Jon
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:8NEWZ
Date:Nov 1, 2004
Words:528
Previous Article:Biennale of Sydney: Various Venues.(SYDNEY)
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