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Monty Dipietro
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Jun 12, 2002
Two for one at the Tokyo Opera City Gallery
Tokyo's Opera City Art Gallery has taken a novel approach with its summer show: Instead of the usual one-man or themed group exhibition, it is running a couple of concurrent but totally unrelated one-man shows at its Shinjuku exhibition space.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Jun 5, 2002
A Japan-Korea joint show that's wide of goal . . .
By this time, even the most blinkered of Tokyo's art enthusiasts will be aware that the planet's premier sporting event, the World Cup, is taking place in Korea and Japan. There is just no ignoring the newspaper and magazine coverage, the live television broadcasts and the hordes of dumbfounded soccer...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
May 29, 2002
The naked truth about (male) beauty
I'm thinking, as I write this, about beauty. I'm thinking about beauty because I'm flying over Siberia, and below me there is an expanse of softly sculpted white. I'm thinking about beauty because I'm returning from Paris, where I spent the last few days -- ostensibly on a writing assignment, but mostly...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
May 22, 2002
From the edges of 'reality'
At the most basic level of classification, most paintings can be assigned to one of two broad but fairly clear-cut categories: representational or abstract. This is to say that what appears on the canvas has generally evolved either from people, places or things found in the real world; or from ideas...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
May 15, 2002
Weird science, but great art
It's the old quantity-versus-quality problem. Though there are only a couple of private contemporary-art museums in Tokyo (the Watari-Um and the Hara), their shows are almost always good and focus on providing authoritative coverage of some of the domestic and international art scenes' most important...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
May 8, 2002
A cult hero hangs on to his cool
From the moment one squeezes through the six thick hanging slabs of foam that serve as the old saloon-style entranceway to Jun Miura's current exhibition at the Laforet Museum, it is apparent that this is no ordinary art show. "Jun Chan Intense #3" is the latest installment in the artist's popular Laforet...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
May 1, 2002
Young artists are making a splash
The third installment in an almost-annual series (they skipped it last year), "New Media New Face 02" is now showing at the NTT InterCommunication Center, in Shinjuku. The work here, from four Japanese artists, falls into the vague but trendy, technology-based genre known as "media art."
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Apr 17, 2002
Into the woods today: mourning nature's demise
Japanese cultural life has long revolved around the changing of the seasons, in particular, and nature, in general. Or has it? The differences between Japanese sensibilities toward nature and those generally held by Westerners have been much discussed. Yet it is interesting to note that, when used to...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Apr 10, 2002
Gallery grazing perfect for a spring day
After visiting the Ginza galleries Saturday afternoon, I found myself unable to decide which of a number of good shows to feature in my column this week. So, instead of zooming in on a particular exhibition, allow me to present an overview.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Apr 3, 2002
In the realms of the spirits
"Ghosts, we hope, may be always with us -- that is, never too far out of the reach of fancy." So wrote British novelist Elizabeth Bowen in the preface to her "Second Ghost Book," published in 1952.
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Mar 27, 2002
Putting a 'gloss' on exhibitions
A computer-geek friend of mine recently posed an interesting problem to me: "If you wanted to save a document so that it was easily accessible 100 years from now, what format would you use?"
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Mar 20, 2002
VOCA roundup is a right royal letdown
It's been almost 100 years since Wassily Kandinsky began creating what are generally regarded as the first purely abstract paintings. The Russian's "compositions," as he termed them, freed him from representation and opened up a new world of expressive possibilities. These were fully explored in the...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Mar 13, 2002
Electric Town project tunes into public art
Typically, from the moment Tokyoites step out the front door, they are subjected to an unrelenting barrage of visual and aural advertising. I've never seen a city that even comes close: Down the street from my place in Kabukicho, squeezed in between the neon signs of a sex club and the golden arches...
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Mar 6, 2002
Getting back to the beginning
How I love to drift off to sleep in cars and on trains. But invariably, when they stop, I wake up. Someone once told me that the reason moving cars and trains are so soporific is because they subconsciously remind us of the time we spent inside our first-ever mode of transport, which was, of course,...
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Feb 27, 2002
Hanayo and Tenko: through a lens blurrily
Cocky, irreverant and devil-may-care, invariably to be found surrounded by admirers as he holds forth from behind a big fat cigar, the Neo-Pop painter Takashi Murakami has for the last few years been one of Japan's leading international art stars.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Feb 20, 2002
Views from a place you've been before
It's always a pleasure to discover an exhibition space in Tokyo that you've never been to before, especially during these difficult economic times when old favorites are closing down. My latest find is Gallery Senkukan, tucked into a tiny Yoyogi side street, which opened a little more than a year ago....
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Feb 14, 2002
Art appreciation as commodity fetishism
For the next three months, the Tokyo Opera City Gallery is devoting its large exhibition space to "JAM: Tokyo-London." Born of a cross-cultural happening in England in 1996, this second installment of JAM focuses on art, fashion and music. Premiered at the Barbican Gallery in London last summer and now...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Feb 6, 2002
Color her beautiful
"Mere colour, unspoiled by meaning and unallied with definite form, can speak to the soul in a thousand different ways." So wrote Oscar Wilde in "The Critic as Artist." There are myriad theories on why and how different wavelengths in the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum affect us in the...
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Jan 30, 2002
Prizewinner who's passing on the torch
When I mentioned in a column last year that Lee U Fan had won the Japanese Art Association's Praemium Imperiale award for painting, this provoked a number of questions from readers.
Japan Times
CULTURE / Art / NEW ART SEEN
Jan 23, 2002
3-D fantasies with a 1-D feel
The biggest event on the capital's contemporary art circuit this week was undoubtedly the opening of Mariko Mori's "Pure Land" at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. The fact that more than a few people were calling this exhibition a "retrospective" hints at how artspeak is changing, as the oldest...

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