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A poem written by 5 poets at once (first attempt)
© » KADIST

Koki Tanaka

Film & Video (Film & Video)

This artwork was part of a group of projects presented in the Japanese Pavilion at the Venice Biennale in 2013. These videos show several participants from different backgrounds gathering to create and object or an action. For this video, he brought together five Japanese poets from different movements and styles.

Walking Through
© » KADIST

Koki Tanaka

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Walking Through is one of a series of videos—sometimes humorous, often absurd—that record the artist’s performative interactions with objects in a particular site. Here, Tanaka has spread out various objects he collected throughout the city of Guangzhou. By fiddling with a window frame, water buckets, plastic bags, cardboard, soda bottles, and many other things, Tanaka creates fragile, temporary sculptures.

Process of Blowing Flour
© » KADIST

Koki Tanaka

Photography (Photography)

Tanaka’s unique understanding of objects and materials is reflected in the four photographs that document his Process of Blowing Flour . The images depict the gradual blowing away of a plate of flour held by Tanaka. Because his pose is static throughout the images, his presence is deemphasized and instead the viewer’s attention is drawn to the motion of the flour.

Ho! Ho! Ho! Merry Christmas: Battle of Easel Point - Memorial Project Okinawa
© » KADIST

Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Filmed underwater, this is the third video in Nguyen-Hatsushiba’s “Memorial Project” series which began in 2001. The title already implies the cultural complexities about to be ironically unravelled: Ho Chi Minh is parodied and Okinawa (where this was filmed) was a battle site in Japan during World War II which then became an American training base during the Vietnam War. To a remix of James Bond movie tracks composed by Quoc Bao, no less than thirty divers in wet suits and full gear advance against the water resistance armed with cartridges of color.

2012.3.24 Kesen-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

Poetry Light Stool
© » KADIST

Aki Sasamoto

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Poetry Light Stool evokes the spirit of Fluxus, the intermedia movement that encouraged artmaking to be simple, fun, and address everyday life. Aki Sasamoto does just that with this ironic work that revolves around found objects, namely a four-legged wooden stool to which she attached four wheels. Coiling above is a goose-neck cable that rises up and culminates in a globe lamp.

2011.5.1 Yonesaki-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

2013.10.20 Kesen-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

2012.11.4 Takata-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints (five of which are included in the Kadist Art Foundation’s collection), Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

2011.4.4 Kesen-cho
© » KADIST

Naoya Hatakeyama

Photography (Photography)

Naoya Hatakeyama’s series Rikuzentakata (2011) documents the devastating aftermath of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Throughout the series of sixty C-prints, Hatakeyama’s photographs depict scenes of torn landscapes and leveled homes, demolished villages and massive piles of detritus pummeled beyond recognition. The images serve as records of disaster, seemingly driven by an intense need to bear witness to collective trauma.

Edinburgh Castle on the Bin Bag
© » KADIST

Takahiro Iwasaki

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Edinburgh Castle on the Bin Bag features a model of the Edinburgh castle constructed by using shiny black cards placed on top of an open, full black plastic trash bag. The model is delicate, with detailed rendering of windows and a flagpole. Despite the negative association of black plastic trash bag, this work offers a sense of wonderment in it its scale and subject matter.

Tectonic Model
© » KADIST

Takahiro Iwasaki

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Tectonic Model is made from a number of leather bound books piled up in different formations that resemble architecture on top of a sawhorse desk. Tiny cranes of about ten centimetres in height are attached to the top of the books, which have their tassels laid out. The intricately balanced arrangements, with some books standing free and upright, gives the impression that the cranes might have stacked the books themselves by lifting the tassels.

ONE MILLION (Japanese Yen)
© » KADIST

Kwan Sheung Chi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Kwan Sheung Chi’s work One Million is a video work depicting the counting of bills. Divided into three versions, the video first shows a number of Japanese ten-thousand-yen bills being counted without in an orderly, efficient manner. In Two Million , a similar counting of one-thousand-dollar bills from Hong Kong follows.

Japanese House Series
© » KADIST

Tomoko Yoneda

Photography (Photography)

Yoneda’s Japanese House (2010) series of photographs depicts buildings constructed in Taiwan during the period of Japanese occupation, between 1895 and 1945. Yoneda focuses both on the original Japanese features of the houses and on details that have been altered since the end of the occupation. The yet-to-be acknowledged history of the occupation of Taiwan and other East Asian countries by Japan during World War II is subtly disclosed in these pictures.

LIFE #1, a reenactment of a Japanese officer who is about to behead an Australian flier. The Pacific, 1945
© » KADIST

Shay Arick

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Part of a series of videos called LIFE, where Shay Arik videos that re-enact iconic journalistic photographs. As explained by the video’s title, the departure point for LIFE #1 is the iconic 1943 photograph published by Life magazine that captures Japanese officer Yasuno Chikao from the Imperial Japanese Navy as he raises his sword, seconds before publically beheading Australian war commando Leonard Siffleet in the shores of Papua New Guinea. In Arick’s restaging there are no onlookers in the scene, the only two figures represented are Chikao and Siffleet: the perpetrator and victim of this fatal act of violence.

A series of personal questions addressed to a Hikimawashi kappa traveling coat
© » KADIST

James Webb

Installation (Installation)

Referencing psychology, philosophy, and spiritualism, A series of personal questions addressed to a Hikimawashi kappa traveling coat by James Webb is an ongoing series in which the artist poses spoken questions to objects via a speaker installed near the object on display. The questions are addressed to the objects as if they were sentient beings able to respond. Each question is left hanging, unanswered for approximately 10 seconds before the next question is posed.

Large Heart No. 49 (Rasen Kaigan series)
© » KADIST

Lieko Shiga

Photography (Photography)

Lieko Shiga’s photographs appear like dreamscapes. They gain much of their visual power from the unusual interplay between light and color, and the way in which her motifs often seem to defy physical laws such as gravity. She often photographs nocturnal landscapes that are both enchanted and haunted, invoking an emotionally and psychologically complex, contemporary inner landscape, as well as the ancient relations between mysticism, spirituality, and folklore, specifically invoking Japanese traditions and beliefs, while at the same time transforming them.

Candy Castle No. 28 (Rasen Kaigan series)
© » KADIST

Lieko Shiga

Photography (Photography)

Lieko Shiga’s photographs appear like dreamscapes. They gain much of their visual power from the unusual interplay between light and color, and the way in which her motifs often seem to defy physical laws such as gravity. She often photographs nocturnal landscapes that are both enchanted and haunted, invoking an emotionally and psychologically complex, contemporary inner landscape, as well as the ancient relations between mysticism, spirituality, and folklore, specifically invoking Japanese traditions and beliefs, while at the same time transforming them.

Z = |Z/Z•Z-1 mod 2|-1: Lavender Town Syndrome
© » KADIST

Andrew Norman Wilson

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Z = |Z/Z•Z-1 mod 2|-1: Lavender Town Syndrome by Andrew Norman Wilson is a multi-channel video that uses three different imaging technologies—a photographic lens, photorealistic ray tracing animations, and fractal ray-marching animations—to travel through three constructed environments. The work’s subtitle, Lavender Town Syndrome, is named for a conspiracy theory in which more than 200 Japanese children were driven to suicide by a particular board in the game Pokémon Red and Green for Game Boy. Many others suffered serious migraines or nosebleeds, or turned violent when their parents tried to take the game away.

The Anabasis of May and Fusako Shigenobu, Masao Adachi, and 27 Years without Images
© » KADIST

Eric Baudelaire

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In a society saturated by images, Eric Baudelaire is interested in political events that have not found their representation. For the film The Anabasis of May and Fusako Shigenobu, Masao Adachi and 27 Years without Images, Baudelaire conducted research on 1970s Japanese cinema and more specifically on Wakamatsu and Masao Adachi’s filmography. In 1971, as the two legendary filmmakers of Japanese Nouvelle Vague were on their way home from a presentation at the Cannes festival, they stopped in Beirut, where their thinking concerning the image took the form of political activism.

Nakayama
© » KADIST

Pierre Gonnord

Photography (Photography)

Nakayama is part of a larger body of work by Pierre Gonnord focusing on the analysis and description of the lifestyles of urban youth in large Western cities. These images reflect on new canons of beauty, and the appearances and simulacra of fashion for a new generation. In particular, these works consider themes of androgyny, crossbreeding, and recycling.

Inder Kommen Sie / It’s a Comedy
© » KADIST

Meiro Koizumi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

This video installation was made for the exhibition “Journey to the West” held in January 2012 in New Delhi, where a group of curators invited six Japanese artists to produce a work to be made around the relationship between Japan and India. In the framework of this exhibition, Meiro Koizumi decided to use a controversial book of modern Japanese history The Judgement of Justice Radhabinod Pal , as material for his work. Koizumi created a performance combining the paradoxical context of this book with monstrous representation of Indian gods.

Over There
© » KADIST

Bontaro Dokuyama

Installation (Installation)

In Over There, Bontaro Dokuyama conducted a series of workshops with various people who had been forced to relocate in temporary housing after the Fukushima accident. Participants in the workshop made masks from local newspaper cuttings, included in the installation as well as videos showing these different persons wearing their masks, pointing in the direction of their hometowns, where they can no longer return. Over There portrays those displaced from Fukushima due to the 2011 nuclear disaster, underlining the subjectivity of each person in opposition to the way they are usually considered within the Japanese society or by the media, calling them “victims from the disaster.”

Japan Syndrome - Mito Version
© » KADIST

Tadasu Takamine

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The video work Japan Syndrome is a continuation of his lines of inquiry, taking post-Fukushima Japan as a case study. The work constructs a theatrical space in which the conflict-filled life sphere of post-Fukushima Japan, and perhaps beyond it, is reenacted in a minimal yet condensed fashion. To conceive this work, the artists has recorded real conversations he had with shop employees in Kyoto, Yamaguchi and Mito from 2011 to 2013, which have been then reenacted as performances in a studio, and recorded as the final form of this piece.

Dr.N Song
© » KADIST

Ozawa Tsuyoshi

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Dr. N Song belongs Ozawa’s body of work The Return of Dr. N in which he follows a humorous fictional character based upon the historical figure Dr. Hideyo Noguchi who researched yellow fever in Ghana in 1927. Though Dr. Noguchi was known for his unruly temper and behavior and many of his discoveries were erroneous, he was widely revered in Japanese society. Ozawa’s Dr. N story explores links between Japan and Africa, past and present, fact and fiction, through the commissioned work of Ghanaian painters and musicians working in popular African styles.

Takasago
© » KADIST

Chia-Wei Hsu

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The word Takasago alludes to several things at once. Takasago is the name of a multi-billion dollar Japanese corporation, previously situated in Taiwan pre-World War II. It is also a famous Japanese Noh play, the oldest extant form of performance in Japan, combining dance, costuming/masks, acting, and operatic chants.

Behold a City 4
© » KADIST

Ryan Villamael

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Behold A City 4 extols the old grandeur of Manila, the nation’s storied capital – the complex nexus of heritage, modernity, and all sorts of compulsions, political or otherwise, that attempt to define it. This is not Manila whittled down to a scale model but a re-imagination of the city by Ryan Villamael in his ardor to approximate its complexity both as a physical, urban fact and an evolving concept. Behold A City 4 features an entirely new topography and arrangement.

Mud Man
© » KADIST

Chikako Yamashiro

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The film installation Mud Man by Chikako Yamashiro is set on Okinawa and South Korea’s Jeju Islands, two locations at the center of local controversies surrounding the presence of the United States military. Japanese and Korean languages are mixed (a combination of unclear Japanese — Uchinaaguchi , fragments and mumbles in Korean and onomatopoeic sound effects to complement the narration), and the landscape of the two islands (Okinawa and Jeju Island) juxtaposed. The film tells the story of a community visited by bird droppings that resemble clumps of mud falling from the sky.

Index (Tokyo)
© » KADIST

Shimon Minamikawa

Painting (Painting)

The painting Index (Tokyo) includes an image of a protest march in Japan. There is some humor in this image and also cultural contextual confusion and displacement, embodied in the painting. The protest we can see on the clipping is against two things : 1)recently the Japanese government revised the constitution (some say illegally) so that the right to collective self-defense is possible; this basically re-militarizes Japan ending decades of pacifism and this sparked the largest public protests in recent years and 2) the protestors are also marching against re-starting nuclear power plants in Japan post-Fukushima.

Cluster Illusion
© » KADIST

Melvin Moti

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Cluster Illusion examines the brain’s tendency to recognize a pattern as something abstract. Rather than seeing the distinct dots of which the images are composed, our brains turn these dots into illusory clouds. This series is a study of human vision and a commentary on the human urge to find shapes and patterns in anything, giving coherence to the whole.

Naoya Hatakeyama

Koki Tanaka

Eric Baudelaire

Currently based in Paris, Franco-American artist Eric Baudelaire has developed an oeuvre primarily composed of film, but which also includes photography, silkscreen prints, performance, publications and installations...

Lieko Shiga

Based on an instinctive feeling of unease with the convenience and automation of daily life, Lieko Shiga has developed an artistic approach that links questions about the nature of the photographic medium with fundamental questions about life and the means of expressing oneself...

Melvin Moti

Scientific research, high and mass culture, and the processes of cultural production in contemporary society plays an important role in the work of Rotterdam-born artist Melvin Moti, currently based in Rotterdam and in Berlin...

Bontaro Dokuyama

Bontaro Dokuyama became an artist after the triple disaster of March 2011 that irrevocably damaged his hometown of Fukushima, “sensing that everything that had been taught to him was a lie.” Previously working as an architect, he then started his artistic practice under a new name in order to underline the beginning of this new life...

Motoyuki Daifu

Ho Rui An

The artist, writer, and researcher Ho Rui An probes histories of globalization and governance, performing a detournement of dominant semiotic systems across text, film, installation, and lecture...

Catherine Opie

Shay Arick

Violence is key to Shay Arick’s practice who employs photography, sculpture, performance, video and drawing as means to understand what motivates people to enact it...

Yoshinori Niwa

Yoshinori Niwa’s practice takes the form of social interventions, executed through performance, video and installation...

Kadar Brock

Kadar Brock makes large-scale abstract paintings via a rigorous process of layering, erasing, and reworking his surfaces; his highly textured canvases are variously discordant, exuberant, and topographical in nature...

Anju Dodiya

Anju Dodiya paintings feature autobiographical and human relationships, with ‘women’ usually at the center...

Shimon Minamikawa

Since the beginning of his career, Minamikawa Shimon has made work that deviates from conventional painting and other formats...

Aki Sasamoto

Aki Sasamoto is an artist whose mediums include performance, sculpture, dance, and whatever other form it takes to get her ideas across...

Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba

Ozawa Tsuyoshi

Ozawa Tsuyoshi is a Japanese conceptual artist who constructs satirical takes on history...

Tadasu Takamine

Tadasu Takamine is one of the most controversial, thought provoking, and irreverent media, video and installation artist working in Japan...

Ryan Villamael

Ryan Villamael’s deeply layered practice is informed by a rare degree of skill and dexterity as well as by vivid imagination and haunting intellectual preoccupations...

Meiro Koizumi

Meiro Koizumi is a Japanese video and performing artist, born in 1976...

James Webb

James Webb is a conceptual artist, known for his site-specific interventions and installations...

Yuichiro Tamura

Yuichiro Tamura works in a wide range of media including video, photography, installation and performance...

Chikako Yamashiro

Chikako Yamashiro engages with political and social histoires of Okinawa to create haunting works drawing on oral accounts...

American Artist

American Artist makes experimental work in the form of sculpture, video, and software that comments on histories of race, technology and forms of knowledge production...

Andrew Norman Wilson

Andrew Norman Wilson is an artist, curator, and filmmaker whose practice is mostly based in research and documentary...

Tomoko Yoneda

Pierre Gonnord

Pierre Gonnord is known for his large scale photographic portraits of people who inhabit the fringes of society...

Chia-Wei Hsu

Embarking from myriad audio-visual narratives, Chia-Wei Hsu pursues imaginative interrogations of cultural contact and colonization in Asia, oftentimes amalgamating his primary narratives with non-human actors including technologies, animals, gods, environments, traditions, and material objects...

Kwan Sheung Chi

Kwan Sheung Chi obtained a third honor B.A...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 3 months ago (02/12/2024)

‘Dazzling moments in the everyday’ inspire Japanese artist Mika Ninagawa’s immersive installation Eternity in a Moment | South China Morning Post Advertisement Advertisement Art + FOLLOW Get more with my NEWS A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you Learn more Japanese filmmaker, photographer and visual artist Mika Ninagawa during an interview in her office in Tokyo...

© » ARTNEWS

about 3 months ago (02/09/2024)

The Best Booths at Marrakech's 2024 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair Skip to main content By Sarah Belmont Plus Icon Sarah Belmont View All February 9, 2024 2:18pm The scene at the 1-54 Contemporary Art Fair in Marrakech...

© » COLOSSAL

about 3 months ago (02/07/2024)

At Hashimoto Contemporary ’s Los Angeles gallery, there’s more than enough to go around...

© » HYPERALLERGIC

about 3 months ago (02/06/2024)

Family Portrait: Japanese Family in Flux Skip to content Still from Still Walking (2008), dir...

© » ARTSY

about 3 months ago (02/05/2024)

5 Artists on Our Radar in February 2024 | Artsy Skip to Main Content Advertisement Art 5 Artists on Our Radar in February 2024 Artsy Editorial Feb 5, 2024 8:50PM “Artists on Our Radar” is a monthly series focused on five artists who have our attention...

© » MODERN MET ART

about 3 months ago (01/30/2024)

New Exhibition Merges Pokémon with Japanese Craft Home / Art Unique Pokémon Exhibit Made With Traditional and Contemporary Japanese Craft Techniques By Margherita Cole on January 30, 2024 Photo: ©JAPAN HOUSE Los Angeles Since its debut in 1996, Pokémon has become a fixture of pop culture...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 3 months ago (01/28/2024)

Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara on his art’s meaning, and chasing the ‘carefree freedom’ of childhood | South China Morning Post Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara on his art’s meaning, and chasing the ‘carefree freedom’ of childhood Art Yoshitomo Nara, one of Japan’s leading contemporary artists, talks about his influences, from punk rock to Kraftwerk, and what drives him – it isn’t money Kate Whitehead + FOLLOW Published: 7:15am, 29 Jan, 2024 Why you can trust SCMP I am from Aomori, in the north of Japan’s main island of Honshu...

© » ARTOMITY

about 3 months ago (01/28/2024)

Kings’ Inscriptions · Contemporary Interpretations – ARTOMITY 藝源 Kwok Mang Ho, Lee Wing Ki, Prof...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 3 months ago (01/28/2024)

A Hong Kong village house with a Balinese vibe brings Scandinavian, Moroccan and Japanese elements together seamlessly – and it all started with a single-line drawing....

© » ARTSY

about 3 months ago (01/22/2024)

11 Contemporary Artists Channeling Pierre Bonnard’s Post-Impressionist Vision | Artsy Skip to Main Content Art 11 Contemporary Artists Channeling Pierre Bonnard’s Post-Impressionist Vision Cath Pound Jan 22, 2024 5:56PM Considered one of the greatest colorists of modern art, Pierre Bonnard reveled in the simple joys of daily life...

© » ARTNET

about 4 months ago (12/18/2023)

The artist's philosophical paintings are on view at the Kyoto City Kyocera Museum of Art...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 4 months ago (12/18/2023)

Art Collector of Japanese Art Who Began with a £55 Punt Sees His Collection Go on Show at the Royal Academy - via The Jewish Chronicle...

© » SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

about 5 months ago (12/12/2023)

Japanese ‘rainbow artist’ Ay-O’s debut solo Hong Kong exhibition the first in a series highlighting significant Asian artists | South China Morning Post Advertisement Advertisement Art + FOLLOW Get more with my NEWS A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you Learn more Japanese artist Ay-O’s screenprint “Homage to Rousseau” is part of his exhibition at the M+ museum of visual culture in the West Kowloon Cultural District...

© » ARTSY

about 5 months ago (12/06/2023)

Why Folding Screens Are Popping Up in Contemporary Artists’ Work | Artsy Skip to Main Content Art Why Folding Screens Are Popping Up in Contemporary Artists’ Work Josie Thaddeus-Johns Dec 6, 2023 4:36PM Ghada Amer never intended to make folding screens for “ Paravent Girls ,” her show on view at New York’s Tina Kim Gallery through December 9th...

© » KUMI CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE ART

about 6 months ago (11/01/2023)

Chiho Aoshima, a prominent Japanese artist, burst onto the international art stage in the early 2000s, showcasing a distinctive fusion of traditional Japanese artistic techniques and contemporary themes...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 7 months ago (10/05/2023)

WHAT MUSEUM, situated in Tennoz, Tokyo, is currently hosting a captivating exhibition entitled "ART de Cha Cha Cha - Exploring the DNA of Japanese Contemporary Art -" from the esteemed Takahashi Ryutaro Collection...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

What happens when a fish baron from Japan decides to collect contemporary Indian art and wants to sell some of his precious collection? He goes to a distinguished gallery in Mumbai, Pundoles, that has history......

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

Japanese Mega-Collector Yusaku Maezawa Is Giving Away $9 Million to His Twitter Followers to See If Money Makes People Happy - via artnet news...

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

At the 2020 Outsider Art Fair, a curated show featured works from the collections of Cindy Sherman, KAWS, Nicole Eisenman, Maurizio Cattelan, and others....

© » LARRY'S LIST

about 19 months ago (10/05/2022)

DUBAI: Christie’s Paris is hosting an online charity auction of Middle Eastern art to benefit artists through the Institut du Monde Arabe (IMA)...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 22 months ago (07/21/2022)

Contemporary Moves In Modern Singaporean Tamil Theatre | ArtsEquator Skip to content Hemang Yadav was involved in a recent development program, Tunjuk Arah/ Iyakkunar, for Malay and Indian theatre directors in Singapore...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 27 months ago (01/26/2022)

5 Artists Who Influenced Contemporary Southeast Asian Art Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles January 26, 2022 By ArtsEquator (1,161 words, 3-minute read) Throughout history and up to the present day, it has been a challenge to define contemporary Southeast Asian art...

© » ARTMARKETMONITOR

about 31 months ago (10/14/2021)

Javier Calleja Breaks Out in Sotheby’s Hong Kong Contemporary Sale During Sotheby’s Hong Kong Contemporary art sales this past weekend, all of the action was in the day sale lots...

© » ARTS EQUATOR

about 49 months ago (04/16/2020)

Weekly Southeast Asia Radar: Japanese ska in Saigon, experimental music in Yangon | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Radar Alberto Prieto via Saigoneer April 16, 2020 ArtsEquator’s Southeast Asia Radar features articles and posts about arts and culture in Southeast Asia, drawn from local and regional websites and publications – aggregated content from outside sources, so we are exposed to a multitude of voices in the region...

© » HIGH FRUCTOSE

about 52 months ago (01/18/2020)

Toshio Saeki, the legendary Japanese artist known for blending eroticism, horror, and humor in his works, passed away in November at the age of 74...

© » ACAW

about 55 months ago (11/01/2019)

- Asia Contemporary Art Week Asia Contemporary Art Week ABOUT Consortium Partners PRESENTED ARTISTS FIELD MEETING ABOUT FIELD MEETING TAKE 6: THINKING COLLECTIONS (2018) TAKE 5: THINKING PROJECTS (2017) TAKE 4: THINKING PRACTICE (2016) TAKE 3: THINKING PERFORMANCE (2015) TAKE 2: AN AFTERTHOUGHT (2015) TAKE 1: CRITICAL OF THE FUTURE (2014) FIELD REVIEW ABOUT FIELD REVIEW ISSUE 1: SOUTH ASIA ISSUE 2: MIDDLE EAST PAST EDITIONS ACAW 2002 – 2018 PRESENTED ARTISTS PRESS PRESS RELEASES PRESS COVERAGE Announcements Posted on Friday, November 1, 2019 · Leave a Comment We’ve updated our name to better represent nearly 20 years of nonprofit service to the field...

© » RANDIAN

about 55 months ago (10/31/2019)

During the inauguration of the 14th edition of the art fair Contemporary Istanbul, chairman Ali Güreli was also enthusiastically stressing the importance of art and culture in Turkey with the statement: “The artistic and cultural dimension needs to be reinforced at all times”....

© » ACAW

about 55 months ago (10/25/2019)

- Asia Contemporary Art Week Asia Contemporary Art Week ABOUT Consortium Partners PRESENTED ARTISTS FIELD MEETING ABOUT FIELD MEETING TAKE 6: THINKING COLLECTIONS (2018) TAKE 5: THINKING PROJECTS (2017) TAKE 4: THINKING PRACTICE (2016) TAKE 3: THINKING PERFORMANCE (2015) TAKE 2: AN AFTERTHOUGHT (2015) TAKE 1: CRITICAL OF THE FUTURE (2014) FIELD REVIEW ABOUT FIELD REVIEW ISSUE 1: SOUTH ASIA ISSUE 2: MIDDLE EAST PAST EDITIONS ACAW 2002 – 2018 PRESENTED ARTISTS PRESS PRESS RELEASES PRESS COVERAGE Announcements Posted on Friday, October 25, 2019 · Leave a Comment ASIA CONTEMPORARY ART WEEK (ACAW) is taking a programmatic sabbatical in 2019 to plan our programs for 2020 and beyond...

© » KUMI CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE ART

about 68 months ago (10/01/2018)

Contemporary Art Station, the platform that facilitates both emerging and established artists to display their works in public, is pleased to announce the first edition of ’Shibuya Station Exhibition’...

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about 84 months ago (06/09/2017)

Summer ’17 Consortium Partner Programs - Asia Contemporary Art Week Asia Contemporary Art Week ABOUT Consortium Partners PRESENTED ARTISTS FIELD MEETING ABOUT FIELD MEETING TAKE 6: THINKING COLLECTIONS (2018) TAKE 5: THINKING PROJECTS (2017) TAKE 4: THINKING PRACTICE (2016) TAKE 3: THINKING PERFORMANCE (2015) TAKE 2: AN AFTERTHOUGHT (2015) TAKE 1: CRITICAL OF THE FUTURE (2014) FIELD REVIEW ABOUT FIELD REVIEW ISSUE 1: SOUTH ASIA ISSUE 2: MIDDLE EAST PAST EDITIONS ACAW 2002 – 2018 PRESENTED ARTISTS PRESS PRESS RELEASES PRESS COVERAGE Announcements Summer ’17 Consortium Partner Programs New York City Venues ASIA SOCIETY MUSEUM Inspired by Zao Wou-Ki: Works by New York City Students Exhibition | Through August 6 Artworks created by New York City public school students based on Asia Society’s fall 2016 exhibition “No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki” are exhibited in this one of a kind exhibition...

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