Daily new cases in Tokyo have gradually declined to the double digits but the metropolitan government has urged continued vigilance. Galleries are enforcing precautions such as temperature-monitoring, mandatory mask-wearing, and timed admission to ensure that visitors can safely enjoy art. Here are eight shows to check out if you’re in the city.
Sep 4–Oct 10
Taro Nasu presents the fifth edition of the exhibition series “gesture, form, technique,” which explores the lasting influence of modernist art and design. Staged in collaboration with Tokyo’s Gallery-Sign, which specializes in French furniture design, the exhibition showcases the work of more than ten well-known figures, from the late architect/designers Jean Prouvé, Charlotte Perriand, and Le Corbusier to contemporary conceptual artists Mika Tajima and Liam Gillick. Highlights include a swing set created by Prouvé as well as Perriand’s oak console designed for the Hôtel le Doron in Méribel, France.
Sep 16–Oct 10
Featuring an intergenerational lineup of artists from Anomaly’s stable, “Echoes of Monologues” asks viewers to reconsider our relationships in a time of pandemic-impelled social distancing. Among the exhibits are Nissan Art Award recipient Ishu Han’s installation about migration and agriculture in Kobe; Yoshiaki Kaihatsu’s tea house of discarded polystyrene packaging, referencing traditional Japanese culture and contemporary consumerism; as well as Elena Knox’s 2020 video The Host (from Actroid Series II), a meditation on identity featuring an AI-robot protagonist.
Sep 11–Oct 17
Drawing inspiration from nature, pre-historic cultures, and animist beliefs, artist Mariko Mori creates sculptures, videos, drawings, and installations that explore transcendental experiences of the world. On view at SCAI The Bathhouse, Divine Stone VI (2019– ) is a 1.2-meter-high acrylic sculpture with a dichroic coating that evokes a translucent gem. In an accompanying series of drawings, Radiant Being (2019), pastel-toned spheres glow due to the use of metallic pigments. Mori’s experiments with the visible spectrum engage with notions of divine light as well as the science of perception.
Sep 16–Oct 24
French sculptor Jean-Michel Othoniel’s first gallery show in Japan, at Perrotin, is titled “Dream Road.” Taking as its departure point the chrysanthemum flower (kiku) and its significance in Japanese culture, the exhibition unveils a new series of mirrored glass and steel sculptures in addition to three paintings on gold leaf. Sculptures such as Kiku – Hiwamoegiiro (Siskin sprout yellow) (2020) celebrate the flower’s delicate form, while the trio of gold-leaf canvases render Othoniel’s beaded sculptural chrysanthemums in black ink.
Oct 3–31
Taka Ishii Gallery is hosting a group exhibition of paintings by emerging artists Daichi Takagi, Lucía Vidales, and Hiroka Yamashita. Based in Kanagawa, Takagi produces atmospheric landscapes, such as the charcoal-hued oil painting Thicket (2019). Vidales, born in Mexico City and now living in Monterrey, presents colorful semi-abstract compositions suggesting spectral limbs. Okayama-based Yamashita is interested in the relationship between human figures and their natural environments, as seen in the oil-on-linen Rice Paddy at Night (2020), depicting a leg submerged in the water.
Sep 23–Nov 7
Asuka Anastacia Ogawa’s first solo exhibition with Blum & Poe brings together a selection of the Japanese-Brazilian artist’s paintings of dark-skinned, androgynous figures set against solid, pastel-toned backgrounds. Among the works on view is the acrylic-on-canvas Medicine girl (2019), portraying a child in a pink dress kneeling under colorful bunting.
Aug 29–Nov 8
Art Tower Mito’s group exhibition “Michikusa: Walks with the Unknown” examines the changing relationship between humanity and ecology. Included are 40 projects including the late Lois Weinberger’s outdoor installation Wild Enclosure (2020) and multidisciplinary artist Yoichi Kamimura’s new sound work Breathe You (2020), which utilizes field recordings of drift ice, marine-animal calls, and human whistling to recreate the natural phenomenon of “singing” ice.
Hara Museum of Contemporary Art
Sep 19–Jan 11, 2021
Hara Museum of Contemporary Art’s group exhibition “Time Flows: Reflections by 5 Artists” centers on different means of perceiving and recording environments in constant flux. Through works including Lee Kit’s installation Flowers (2018), composed of a light projection and cardboard painting, and Tokihiro Sato’s long-exposure, black-and-white photographs of landscapes, the exhibition reveals how art can be used to decipher how time acts on their surroundings.
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