Chu Enoki: Kirin Plaza Osaka.Documenting his public performances and site-specific sculpture since 1970, through photography, video, and drawings, this first retrospective of the sixty-two-year-old avant-garde artist Chu Enoki e·no·ki n. pl. e·no·kis Enokidake. [Short for enokidake.] conveyed the intensity of an independent artistic commitment sustained by efforts to invent new ways of perception, suggesting Enoki's significance as an important precursor for artists who emerged in the '90s. Enoki's first public performance, Naked Happening, 1970, demonstrates an inadvertent affinity with the Situationist International. Enoki walked in the middle of a Ginza street on a Sunday, shirtless, with the Expo '70 logo sunburned sun·burn n. Inflammation or blistering of the skin caused by overexposure to direct sunlight. tr. & intr.v. sun·burned or sun·burnt , sun·burn·ing, sun·burns To affect or be affected with sunburn. onto his bare chest--a protest against the seductive "spectacle" of Expo' 70, the landmark world fair that trumpeted Japan's postwar economic recovery, and against the public policy of the Pedestrian's Paradise that kept congested con·gest·ed adj. Affected with or characterized by congestion. congested ENT adjective Referring to a boggy blood-filled tissue. See Nasal congestion. city streets "open to pedestrians" only on Sundays for limited hours. In Everyday Life Multi, 1977, Enoki converted his private house into a public space where anyone could come and see his work. Shaving Half of My Hair, 1977-81, a work based on the simple idea of going about his everyday routine for four years with one side of his head and body entirely shaved, provoked his conservative neighbors in Kobe to behave differently toward him in public for at least as many years. Bar Rose Chu, 1979, was a two-day engagement in which Enoki opened a bar inside a gallery and served as its mustached hostess in drag; here, alongside The Return of Bar Rose Chu, 2006, he showed an untitled video, 1979-2006, depicting the birth of his female alter ego A doctrine used by the courts to ignore the corporate status of a group of stockholders, officers, and directors of a corporation in reference to their limited liability so that they may be held personally liable for their actions when they have acted fraudulently or unjustly or when . Enoki's radically funny but existential public interventions immediately involved the audience, inciting an engagement with the contingencies of the everyday. During the '80s, Enoki produced large-scale, site-specific sculptures, addressing the problems of the postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al adj. Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows. Adj. 1. age. Space Lobster P-81, 1981, was a gigantic sculpture made from a defunct railway car, parts of a scrapped ship, and junked electrical appliances. Shown at Kobe Port Island Expo in 1981, the sculpture was accompanied by a science-fiction narrative about extraterrestrials sending back garbage jettisoned from the earth. In 1990, Enoki started digging a hole on a piece of land purchased by a friend in a new suburb of Kobe; after a year, he reached a ten-million-year-old layer of bedrock. This project, Pelting the Skin of the Earth, 1990, started out as a personal attempt to recover a physical contact with the primordial layer of the earth; consequently, Enoki encouraged frequent visits from neighbors and local schoolchildren schoolchildren school npl → écoliers mpl; (at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl schoolchildren school , creating a space of communication in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of an impersonal suburb. Knowing little about avant-garde practices abroad, Enoki conceived his works completely out of his visceral responses to the exigencies of his time and place. Creating situations through which things can be perceived in new ways thanks to his inventive use of simple actions and disused objects, Enoki's interventions prefigure pre·fig·ure tr.v. pre·fig·ured, pre·fig·ur·ing, pre·fig·ures 1. To suggest, indicate, or represent by an antecedent form or model; presage or foreshadow: the public performances in the '90s of an artist like Shimabuku, who visits different places in order to put forgotten legends in a new relational context. Enoki's sculpture using industrial detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue. de·tri·tus n. pl. and science fiction to create social commentary finds an heir in the neo-Pop sculpture of Kenji Yanobe, who curated this exhibition. Perhaps that's why the sci-fi aspect of Enoki's work was highlighted here by the presentation of a new sculpture, RPM-1200, 2006. Made of numerous pieces of finely polished junk metal revealing a futuristic skyline in the dark, it suggests the resurrection of a debased de·base tr.v. de·based, de·bas·ing, de·bas·es To lower in character, quality, or value; degrade. See Synonyms at adulterate, corrupt, degrade. [de- + base2. Utopia by the restorative power of art. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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