Monday, July 31, 2017

Exhibit Review: Of Women By Women, Charlotte, USA

Of Women By Women: Selections from The Do Good Fund
The Light Factory, Charlotte, North Carolina, USA

The Do Good Fund is a Georgia-based charity building a museum-quality collection of post-war Southern photography. The fund lends its collections to museums, galleries, and other institutions interested in promoting photographic art, and its latest is on display at The Light Factory, a Charlotte, North Carolina gallery and institute of photography education.  Of Women By Women fairly well describes the exhibit theme, an unexpectedly powerful collection of images that left me wanting to see more. The images did not appear especially agenda-driven, apart perhaps from the preponderance of subjects that appeared to be working class and rural poor. The display, as can be seen in the photos here, was simple but effective.  On my visit a young lady welcomed our small group, explained the background to the exhibit, and then left our group alone to wander and view.  If I were living in Charlotte, I would be happy to explore more of Light Factory’s exhibits and education offerings.  It looks like a happening place in a happening neighborhood.

The Do Good Fund maintains an online catalog of its collection, for those who’d like to see what they’re doing but won’t be making it to the southeast United States.  Check it out at: http://www.thedogoodfund.org/

The Light Factoryhttp://lightfactory.org/







Margaret's Rhubarb
2010

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Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Book review: Ihei, Kimura. Akita. 1978 (2011).

Mutsumi found this book at a beer bar in Ikebukuro Station.  We were slaking our thirst after a long day of walking, not there for the books.  In fact we were lucky they didn’t have a table for us when we came in.  We sat at the bar instead, near which is a bookcase with a small collection of mostly magazines.  When we found Akita, we cleared the bar, started at the front, and worked our way through what must have been around 200 plates, all black and white, and shot in the post-war period, from the 1950s-70s.  As the title indicates, the subject is the prefecture of Akita, still a rural area of Japan that from the looks of these images has changed drastically in the past half century.  Apart from the occasional bit of English – the word “post” on a postbox, for example – or a motorcycle or car in the background, it seems these photos could have been taken 100 years ago, or even 500 years ago.  There are no signs of mass produced anything – no TVs, radios, cell phones, watches, name brands, baseball caps, or even something as simple as zippers.  All the clothing appears to be hand-made, everyone walks or in winter uses sleighs, motor power is provided by animals, and home life appears to center around eating, drinking, talking, and smoking.  The images are absolutely amazing for revealing a way of life that when it was recorded neither the subjects nor photographer could have imaged disappearing within 50 years of having been recorded.  Sometimes we can’t see the significance of what photographers record until years later, after which we are incredibly thankful for the investment in time and effort, despite others not being able to see the value in the work as it was being produced. Thank you, Kimura-san.

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Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Exhibit review: Jigoku Wonderland: Buddhist Hell Scenes, Tokyo, Japan

Jigoku Wonderland:  Buddhist Hell Scenes
Mitsui Memorial Museum

Opening day was not as crowded as expected.  Not crowded at all, in fact.  Mutsumi said it was because this was a B-grade exhibit, not something likely to draw hordes of fashionistas.  The building was perhaps more impressive than the exhibit, an early 20th century construction that has been designated an Important Cultural Property.  The exhibit featured approximately 100 pieces ranging from the 13th century to the present, all connected to the theme of hell as conceived in Japanese Buddhism.  A few texts were on display, but most items were paintings, drawings, or sculpture.  As with the work collected in the exhibit of the Belgian Fantastic, many of the paintings and drawings demanded close inspection to appreciate the detail filling out the corners of the canvas or paper.  Common themes included the depiction of Emmao and the ten judges of hell, the corresponding ten levels of hell, and the various tortures perpetrated by the guardian monsters against their human victims, which consisted in the main of burning, boiling, dismembering, and impaling.  Altogether this was a well conceived and interesting collection of art.  It might have been improved by a suitably gruesome soundtrack of roaring flames, sawing bones, banging metal, dripping blood, breaking bones, screams and moans.  Museum management needs to rethink customer relations.  We were told off by a guard for using our mobile device within the exhibit.  We were not photographing or talking on the phone, just searching maps for our next destination.

A selection of small images of some of the exhibit items is available on the museum's Japanese language website:  http://www.mitsui-museum.jp/exhibition/index.html

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Monday, July 17, 2017

Exhibit review: A Life 1968--2017: Shunji Dodo, Tokyo

A Life 1968--2017:  Shunji Dodo
Gallery 916, Tokyo

This was the most inspiring exhibit of summer, the one that opened new possibilities in my own work.  The inspiration wasn’t terribly radical.  It was more like a sympathetic understanding of possibility, of seeing my work in Dodo’s, and his in mine, and realizing mine might one day look as interesting.  I appreciated seeing how what would seem ordinary worked well, which suggested I can perhaps look again at such scenes when they present themselves.  I saw many images which seemed excessively dark in their exposure and development, far more than I would be comfortable working with but suggesting that such images are not outside the range of possibility.  Dodo created both posed and spontaneous street portraits, the former largely in rural communities, the latter in urban. Despite their somewhat repetitive appearance (of groups of people smiling at the camera), I began to appreciate the posed images for revealing the character of the photographer, someone able to convince large numbers of strangers to participate in his work.  Two types of images made me want to try my own experiments:  still life of the commonplace, stuff you might come home with in your pockets or in your bag; and images of half-things, cars or people, for example, shown only partially and inviting the viewer to fill in the rest.

Sunday, July 16, 2017

Review: Tokyo Photographic Art Museum



While this is a lovely facility in an upscale neighborhood, I was disappointed on three counts.  The first seems to be rather common to Japan, the prohibition of photographing exhibitions.  I would have liked to have taken an image or two for this blog.  I’ve been to exhibits that actually encourage the taking and sharing of images on social media as a form of free advertisement.  It makes for a more interactive experience of art than simply acting as a passive consumer/viewer.  Secondly, there is no permanent display.  Apparently there used to be, but it was long ago removed.  And lastly, there was no display during my visit of Japanese photography.  Fortunately, I found an excellent exhibit of a Japanese photographer -- photography permitted -- at Gallery 916.



























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Saturday, July 15, 2017

Exhibit review: World Press Photo 17, Tokyo, Japan




World Press Photo 17
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

Since this is a collection of news photographs, it wasn’t unusual, while viewing the exhibit, to come across a familiar image. What was helpful here were the descriptions and often the context, as some were part of a larger series.  The collection included around 100 images from the annual journalism awards, printed on poster board with background information in both Japanese and English.  Some of the more interesting images in the collection were from long-term projects, such as a series by an Iranian photographer working within his own culture, as well as a Finn shooting a small rural community in the US midwest.

Worth a visit if you're in the neighborhood, but not perhaps a special trip.

The entire collection can be viewed online here: https://www.worldpressphoto.org/collection/photo/2017

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Friday, July 14, 2017

Exhibit review: Dayanita Singh: Museum Bhavan, Tokyo, Japan

Dayanita Singh:  Museum Bhavan
Tokyo Photographic Art Museum

According to the bio provided by the museum, Ms Singh is a well-known photographer who began her career doing commercial work before "retiring" to develop her own projects, a retrospective of which made up this exhibit. Included was a documentary series on Indian eunuchs, on which she has published at least two books, perhaps the most direct and honest work on display, images which spoke of a need to share her witness clearly and unambiguously.  The remainder of the exhibit consisted of two installations, which the artist refers to as Museums, including a series of books, called Pocket Museums, that fold out accordion-like to reveal a group of images arranged in themes that unfortunately weren’t terribly obvious. Seven of these were presented in frames up to a meter long, each with its own title, with copies on sale in the gift shop.  Other Museums were presented as collages arranged in large wooden frames, featuring images of a type in which I am interested – architecture, still life, textures of everyday life – and may have better appreciated in a different context.  Apart from the museum on women, and another on files (consisting of images of rooms stacked top to bottom with paper files), I didn’t see how the images in the other Museums hung together, what kind of stories they were attempting to tell.  Perhaps I wasn’t trying hard enough.  Or perhaps I was trying too hard.  The most difficult piece of work in the exhibit consisted of 20-30 images of a box wrapped in red cloth, all shot with the same set-up, with no change in perspective, framing, or exposure.  The box was wrapped, shot, unwrapped, rewrapped, and shot again. Over and over.  Close inspection, the description notes, reveals small differences in how the box was wrapped.  This is the kind of work that might indulge the image maker’s experimental impulse, but is perhaps best left in the photographer’s private collection. Photography in the exhibit was prohibited.  The two images here are copies of the TOP Musuem's flyer. This is not an exhibit I would especially recommend and not one that I would visit again.

Dayanita Singh's website:  
https://dayanitasingh.org/

Tokyo Photographic Art Museum announcement:
https://topmuseum.jp/e/contents/exhibition/index-2779.html

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Thursday, July 13, 2017

Exhibit Review: Nihon Eiga: The History of Japanese Film, Tokyo, Japan

Nihon Eiga: The History of Japanese Film
National Film Center, Tokyo

Nihon Eiga is a permanent exhibit featuring a small portion of the National Film Center’s large collection of film artifacts, such things as posters, scripts, still images, camera equipment, and props. Like many Japanese spaces, the area is small but used to good effect by layering and stacking.  There is very little unused wall or floor space.  Material is organized chronologically beginning with visual storytelling before the arrival of film and continuing on through to a final section on animation. Throughout there are small video screens displaying clips of historically relevant films.  During my weekday visit, I saw only three other guests and had no difficulty availing myself of several of the available stools, a nice to chance to relax while also enjoying parts of the display.  Japanese cinephiles are sure to find some mention of their personal favorites here, though there may be only one or two items per person.  Kurosawa, for example, probably Japan’s best known director to audiences outside Japan, is represented by costume sketches for Dodeskaden and a scrapbook of production stills of Ikiru collected by its star, Shimura Takashi.  Among the other items of interest was an original script of Tokyo Story, a collection of personal items of Tanaka Kinuyo, and the original puppets in the 1964 production of Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer.  The Center also has a regular screening schedule, often centered around a director, actor, genre or theme.

Monday, July 3, 2017

Exhibit review: Fantastic Art in Belgium, Kobe, Japan

Fantastic Art in Belgium
The Hyōgo Prefectural Museum of Art, Kobe

One hundred twenty pieces of the fantastic, mostly sketches and paintings, with an emphasis on Hieronymus Bosch.  Given the nature of the work, which typically features detailed illustration filling up all corners of the canvas, close inspection was necessary -- but unfortunately often not possible. The weekend crowd made viewing a laborious exercise of standing in a slow moving queue, or dancing around the room trying to find spaces in the crowd in order to get a glimpse of at least a few pieces.   Layout was fairly typical, each painting or drawing in it's own frame, hung eye level, perhaps 50cm apart. No photography was permitted within the exhibit. Jet lag drug me down more quickly than I anticipated and the visit was mostly a disappointment.

(Poster for same show after it moved from Kobe to Tokyo.)