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Jennifer Purvis
For Jennifer Purvis's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
CULTURE / Art
Jan 13, 2001
New gallery seen as artist launchpad
Bleak economic times at the cusp of the millennium saw the closure of Tokyo's Sagacho Exhibit Space after 17 years due to lack of funding. But there is still hope for young exhibitors. Coinciding with Sagacho's demise was the opening of the showrooms and gallery for design agency H.A. Deux.
CULTURE / Art
Dec 24, 2000
MoT's 'Gift' gets every visitor involved
Eleven Japanese and foreign artists are featured in "The Gift of Hope," the third exhibition in the "MoT Annual" series, which previously only showcased emerging Japanese artists. It was decided to expand the format this year because of the transition from the 20th to the 21st century. The artists were assigned to communicate with the audience -- to offer a "gift of hope" for the future through their art, by including the audience in their work.
CULTURE / Art
Dec 16, 2000
Op-ting out of the conventional frame
"Yellow-Green Spiral" by Jun Fujita, 2000, acrylic on board Op Art, pioneered by Bridget Riley and Victor Vasarely in the '60s, creates the impression of swirling movement and tricks the eye into perceiving three dimensions. Optical discrepancy is achieved by placing the geometric shapes precisely onthe picture plane by using techniques such as reversal and tiling. Tiling repeats a graphic to create an all-over pattern, much like wallpaper. In reversal, negative space (that is, the space around the object) and positive space (the object itself) are given equal value. No clue is provided to identify top or bottom, up or down, as one geometric form appears to move into another.
CULTURE / Art
Dec 3, 2000
The cutting edge of sound and vision
For some, myself included, the U.K. Sound Design exhibition, held Nov. 23-27 at the Ground in Harajuku, was a stroll down memory lane. Organized by the British Council in Japan, the show assembled record sleeves from seminal British designers of the last 30 years. Seeing many old records that had made their way into my collection, I realized I had been enjoying the illustrations of these designers long before I understood that the sleeves had in fact been "designed." How can we look forward to MP3s when albums give us such great art?
CULTURE / Art
Nov 26, 2000
Evoking a sense of time and place in many-layered canvases
Graeme Todd makes landscapes, hidden and subverted under multiple layers of varnish. The paintings resemble a magical transparent pool, offering up subtle images that float toward the eye, carried forward by the separate varnished surfaces.
CULTURE / Art
Nov 19, 2000
Wake-up calls to the subconscious
Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978) is the great painter of the enigma in our era and his work is now on exhibit at Tokyo's Bunkamura in one of the most comprehensive shows seen yet in Japan.
CULTURE / Art
Nov 11, 2000
Capturing private moments of a gritty London
"Point and Shoot" -- an exhibition of gritty black-and-white photographs of nothing in particular, the work of the inimitable Henry Bond and his shots of the streets, people and places of London -- his home -- is now on show at the Taro Nasu Gallery.
CULTURE / Art
Nov 5, 2000
Making no bones about corporeality
Jeanne Dunning has made an object called the "blob" -- an amorphous, skin-colored sack filled with a viscous substance that: crushes, oozes out, takes a bath with or sleeps with the subject. She uses it in a wide body of work to investigate the nature of corporeality.
CULTURE / Art
Oct 29, 2000
Local boy makes good on his own
It is practically impossible to beat the odds and attain major recognition and success in Japan as an individual artist. When an artist does achieve success it is usually the result of a miracle -- or nepotism. It is not uncommon for gallerists who want to promote a particular artist to arrange a show for them overseas before holding one here, hailing them as having "made it" in New York or wherever to boost their local appeal.
CULTURE / Art
Oct 22, 2000
Young talent surfaces at Tokyo Designers Week
If you happened to be in the Aoyama, Shibuya or Daikanyama districts of Tokyo over the last week you may have noticed a brightly patterned bus zooming around. It was transporting whoever was interested in going to the many spots in this area that were exhibiting the work of Japanese and international designers. In its third year, Tokyo Designers Week is beginning to draw a great international pool of renowned designers and significant organizations that support new design, and consequently it is also becoming an important showcase for otherwise unseen Japanese design.
CULTURE / Art
Oct 15, 2000
Dry, irreverent, Dutch design booms
The Dutch have been irreverent for years, but now the world is catching on to their specific kind of creative daring -- Rem Koolhaas has a stranglehold on architecture, Droog design leads in product design and nothing could be cooler than Victor and Rolf in fashion or the man who nurtured the scene, Alexander van Slobbe.
CULTURE / Art
Oct 8, 2000
Curator takes the J-way to Stockholm
"The J-Way" sounds like another example of Japanese-English, but if you thought so, like me, you would be mistaken. It is, in fact, the title of a high-octane exhibition of over 40 Japanese artists that was held Sept. 29-Oct. 1 at the Lydmar Hotel in Stockholm.
CULTURE / Art
Oct 1, 2000
Stringing a line through fashion and art
The 21st century in Tokyo is seeing a great migration of disciplines from one sphere into another. Fashion designers are collaborating with artists and exhibiting in galleries. Artists are collaborating with designers and exhibiting in shops.
CULTURE / Art
Sep 24, 2000
Impressions made in paper take form
When the semioticist Roland Barthes came to Japan, he decided to do what many foreigners do, which is to base his impressions of Japan on exactly that, his impressions. His book "The Empire of Signs" is ostensibly about Japan, but the author acknowledged (with no shame) that it actually was a collection of generalizations based on his outsider observations. It is a fabricated and imagined place that he describes.
CULTURE / Art
Sep 17, 2000
Sometimes a shower stall is just. . .
With his bathroom in a suitcase, MK Kahne has turned the most utilitarian dreams of wandering wayfarers into reality. Not just any old utility, this is a sexy, transportable washroom which could have been designed for Maxwell Smart, complete with dismountable plumbing that packs neatly away in the leather cases lining the length of the back rim and base. Housed in a dark, glossy mahogany case somewhat like a giant double bass case, it has a lid extending up to accommodate the shower and circular piping for the curtain.
CULTURE / Art
Sep 10, 2000
A philosopher behind the video camera
Hitherto, people confronted by "video art" would mentally steel themselves to be bored by an alienating experience that excluded rather than included. This is the reason why an artist such as Pipilotta Rist, originally a rock-video director, has gained such enormous popularity for being the easy and exuberant progenitor of a difficult medium. Rist takes us to the cutting edge of ironic (rock) heaven. She has been eagerly adopted as an art star as she demonstrates that the medium is not for otaku only.
CULTURE / Art
Sep 3, 2000
The making of alternative history
The xich lo (cyclo) is as ubiquitous in Vietnam as the tuk tuk is in Thailand, but completely man-powered: The driver peddles the vehicle behind the comfortably seated passenger. It is currently an important mode of transportation on Vietnam's streets, as well as a livelihood for countless drivers, and yet the Vietnamese government has begun an aggressive campaign to eliminate this pollutionless mode of transport. This will leave countless cyclo drivers without a means of making a living.
CULTURE / Art
Aug 27, 2000
Dogs at Saatchi and Saatchi Gallery
The philosophy that primes Jun Fukukawa's work, a combination of painting and sculpture, is a blast from the recent past. Fukukawa is inspired by the writings of Carlos Castaneda, particularly the book "The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge" whose hallucinatory Indian mystical experiences informed a whole generation of hippies in the late 1960s and '70s and popularized the practice of shamanistic rituals in every commune.
CULTURE / Art
Aug 20, 2000
Lessons in transforming space
Mukojima, two stops out from Asakusa, would appear on one's first visit to be the boondocks. Nonetheless, this suburban Tokyo backwater has been the location this year of two site-specific architecture and art projects.
CULTURE / Art
Aug 13, 2000
Getting interconnected at Kim's
Interconnectivity is a technology buzzword, but Kim Gordon -- rock star of Sonic Youth fame, originator of the X Girl label, and now artist and curator of "Kim's Bedroom," currently at Parco Gallery -- has presented it as the locus of her first curatorial foray. Gordon has assembled an eclectic group of friends, most of whom are already either famous artists or have gained recognition in their respective fields, and invites all comers to participate in the social culture that informs her life at this point in time.

Longform

Historically, kabuki was considered the entertainment of the merchant and peasant classes, a far cry from how it is regarded today.
For Japan's oldest kabuki theater, the show must go on