2013年4月17日 星期三
2013年4月8日 星期一
TAKASHI MURAKAMI Flowers & Skulls Exhibition
Immersing
in The TAKASHI MURAKAMI Flowers & Skulls Exhibition in Gagosian Gallery is
pleasure experience to me. This is the first Takashi Murakami's exhibition in
Hong Kong. Flowers with different expressions and colorful skulls fills the
gallery. We, as audiences, can experience a visit with "joy and
terror" at the same time.
Takashi
Murakami is a famous but controversial artist in international arena. He
announces a "superflat" style to represent the traditional Japanese aesthetic characteristics and the post-war Japanese culture and society.
Takashi further studies the subculture in Japanese society like manga, pop
culture, as the topics of his work. Through his works, we can see his efforts to
bridge the Japanese culture to the western art history and to express
individual thought about the defeated culture of post war Japan.
In the
exhibition, two distinctive iconic subjects, flowers and skulls constructs a
space of "joy and terror. This is the attempt that Takashi to explore the
central dichotomies in his art. [1] At the first impression, Takashi's work is
full of childishness and psychodelic as the outline of the paintings are manga style and colorful. Flowers with smiling face are lovely and skulls are not horrible since they are
painted in bright and vivid color. However, if we engage into the atmosphere,
we may have a deeper and strong sensation of the paintings. In the common
cognitive frame, flowers represent bliss, peace and full of vitality. On the
contrary, skulls give the impression of horror and death. Reading through the paintings,
I feel confused about the already conceived meanings of these two objects. The
bright smiling flowers seem not to be a smile through heart. Just like wearing
a mask to hide the real emotion. From a video that interview with Takashi, he
said that flowers with a large variety of color shows a complex of emotion, not
simply the original and positive emotion [2]. Skulls, on the other hand, are
presented in some bright and warm color. The sense of horror of skulls
vanished. The intersection of feelings during walking around the gallery is an
interesting experience.
Left: Flower Ball Cosmos, 2008 Right: Flowerball Black, 2007
Blue flower & Skulls, 2012
Of Chinese Lions Peonies, Skulls, And Fountains, 2011
Around sound art festival and retreat
Before
participating in this festival, I have a lack of understanding about sound art.
Sound art is not very prevailing art practice in Hong Kong still. In the
general sense, art mostly relates to painting, sculpture, music, those emphasize
in the end product. However, the sound art has a interdisciplinary nature.
Different media, subjects and environment can be part of the sound arts. More
importantly, the notions of sound, listening and hearing is the focus in the
sound art.
The open and quite environment of the Kuwn Tong Ferry Pier.
The
Around sound art festival took place in the Kuwn
Tong Ferry Pier is a fresh
and interesting experience to me. The venue is the right place for sound art
and site-specific work. Kuwn Tong Ferry Pier has its own history. Part of the pier is abandoned and becomes a quite place compared to the crowded past. Also,
the environment is full of different sound elements. The sea breeze, the sound of ferry,and people's noise, all these become part of
the components and inspirations of the sound arts and installation. the festival offer an opportunity for audience to listen the created or composed sound by the artists.
I found a on-site artist, Matt Cook, is
working on his installation "Untitled (2013)". This is a
good example of site-specific art and sound art as he fixed different
components together to coordinate with the sound around the pier. He connected electric wires, motors, metals, and other sound generating objects, part of
them seems "unrelated", to create or replay the sound of the pier. It
is fascinating to witness the little group of instruments to play like
orchestra. Matt said that the sound around could become his inspiration. He can
alter parts of the installation to create the sound he heard. His work is
lively, variable, and interactive with the sound, environment and audience.
The working process of Matt Cook. "Listen, focus, and work"
Little Orchestra in the pier
Another work presented in the pier is "Momo-tarou (2013)" by
Akio Suzuki and Hiromi Miyakita.
It is a totally different piece compared with Matt's piece. It is a piece of installation and performance which adds one more layer to the work. The
performance needed a couple of tools, hammer, sticks, nails. Akio was responsible for constructing the
frame for Hiromi to perform. Firstly, most of the attention were devoted to Akio as he were
constructing the frame and producing sounds "Pang! Pang! Pang!",
"Ding! Ding! Ding!". Not many of us notice the other performer.
Later on, Hiromi started doing some action to coordinated with or response to
the sound. Her movement changed according to the sound produced. In my point of
view, no fixed movement or dance was planned before hand. The artists can
alter their performance according to the sound and environment. In other words,
there can be various performance with the same theme, but under different
circumstances. It can be classified as performance art also as it was performed
by artists themselves, no limit on venue or time, and relationship between
audience and performers. We, as audience, also became parts of the environment
and engaged in a closer relation with the artists. The impression become more
direct.
The performance: Momo-tarou (2013)
The Around sound art festival introduce
a new art category to me that listening and hearing can embrace with
environment and other art forms in some interesting and innovative way.
Visiting this festival is a good experience.
2013年3月28日 星期四
Yasumasa Morimura, Portrait (Futago), 1988
Yasumasa Morimura, Portrait (Futago), 1988 ; photograph ; chromogenic print with acrylic paint and gel medium, 82 3/4 in. x 118 in. (210.19 cm x 299.72 cm)
Source: http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/22622#ixzz2OWPIduC1
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
(source: http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/22622)
Source: http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/22622#ixzz2OWPIduC1
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
(source: http://www.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/22622)
Yasumasa Morimura's Portrait (Futago), 1988 is a typical example of the above
issues. Portrait (Futago) intentionally takes from Edouard Manet's Olympia(1863), a master piece of
western canon. Morimura imitate Manet's historic masterpiece by
recreating the scenes of 'Olympia' through wearing wig, make-up and creating
the similar setting. His work lead to the reflection of the Japanese artists'
role under the western influence and the gender identity.
Western arts has a
important status in art history and influence different arts development in
parts of the world . Because of its influential role in the art world and its
sophisticated development, many arts development or values are based on the
Western side. it seems to become a guideline of art. Japan is also a region
that under the sphere of western arts influence. "Since the Meiji
restoration of 1868, it brought with western influence in Japanese art
world" (D'Evelyn). Western
culture started to invade into Japanese society, especially in arts. Japanese
artist started to imitate the western painting style. The traditional Japanese
painting lost its ground. Morimura is also under a generation which
experienced the western invasion into local art word and culture. "Morimura loved to draw in the
traditional Western manner when
he was a student. He copied Western masters largely because his school,
like most art schools in Japan, taught Western art and art history" (Brew). Later on, he started to concern the
western influence on Japanese culture as a Japanese artist. In Portrait (Futago), Morimura attempts to questioning the status of western arts
in the Asian arena and the role of Japanese or Asian arts under the invasion of
western culture in his work Portrait
(Futago) by showing
an Asian figure which replaces the original nude Olympia in a European painting canon. He,
himself, situating in a western painting setting represents the Japanese
artists under the western arts atmosphere.
Gender
identity is another important theme of Portrait
(Futago). In western
painting, female nude is a traditional genre. It was a master genre of the official
French salons of the nineteenth century. Many artists had accessed this theme
such as Courbet to Matisse and Picasso. Indeed
,the nude female in Manet's Olympia is as a product for male gaze and sexual
desires. "He tried to profane the idealized nude in the academic
tradition" (Musee d'Orsay, 2006). Morimura further develop this topic by
questioning the gender identity of nude female in the western painting. In the Portrait (Futago), " Morimura makes up his body, wears a wig and
imitates with his masqueraded body-image a female gender-role as a servant of
sexual desires. What the artist presents in his performance remains the male
gaze on an 'incomplete' female body-image" (Wagner, 2004). He try to question the gender
identity of nude female in the western painting. On the other hand, his masquerading
is incomplete as the missing of female sexual identification, breasts, and the
assumed presence of male sexual organ, penis. What are the lines for the gender
identity (sexual organs, costumes, make-up, others perceptions)?" The
placement of Morimura as a woman destabilizes the notion of fixed, binary gender
roles of male and female that is prevalent in existing culture, and instead
constructs a new, more elastic gender identity, where stereotypes of male and
female are subverted "(Roca,
2006).
Reference:
D'Evelyn , H.
(n.d.). Western encounter: The transformation of japanese art.
Retrieved from
http://www.stolaf.edu/people/kucera/YoshidaWebsite/evolution/essay_pages/heather_d.evelyn.htm
Brew , J.
(n.d.). Yasumasa morimura - the art of self-portaiture in a post-modern
global japan. Retrieved from
http://outsiderjapan.pbworks.com/w/page/9758570/Yasumasa Morimura - The Art of
Self-Portaiture in a Post-Modern Global Japa
Musee d'Orsay.
(2006). Olympia. Retrieved from
http://www.musee-orsay.fr/index.php?id=851&L=1&tx_commentaire_pi1[showUid]=7087&no_cache=1
Roca, Raymond
Roca, R. (2006,
03). Cultural identity is constructed and challenged by stereotypes.
Retrieved from http://www.agero-stuttgart.de/REVISTA-AGERO/ARTICOLE IN LIMBI
STRAINE/Cultural identity de RR.htm
Wagner, B. (2004, 12
21). Gender - double trouble and transgression: Yasumasa morimura's
appropriation of a desirable body. Retrieved from
http://academinist.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/010112Wagner_Yasumasa.pdf
2013年2月20日 星期三
Artist
Yasumasa Morimura
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From: http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/artpages/yasumasa_morimura_marilyn_monroe1.htm |
Biography
Born in 1951, Osaka, Japan
Lives and works in Osaka
EDUCATION
1985
Columbia University, New York
1982
Philadelphia College of Art, Philadelphia
Type of work
self-portrait renderings in photography, performance and
video.
Background
Yasumasa Morimura (b.1951, Osaka) appropriates universally well
known images derived from art history, mass media and pop culture to create
unconventional and bold self-portrait renderings in photography, performance
and video. Through the extensive use of props, costumes, make-up and digital
manipulation, Morimura masterfully transforms himself into recognizable
subjects that punctuate the western cultural cannon. His series include works
based on seminal paintings by artists such as Frida Kahlo, Van Gogh, Velazquez
or Goya and on pictorial sources from history and the mass media. His
unsettling deconstruction of iconic images and masterpieces challenges the
assumptions already placed on such works/images while commenting on Japan's
complex and conflicting absorption of Western culture. His ability to satirize
and simultaneously create an homage of his source material is what makes
Morimura's work particularly forceful and effective.
Reason for choosing Yasumasa Morimura
Western arts has giant influence in the world. How does it
influence the Japanese arts? During the cultural exchange and arts absorption,
how did the Japanese artists position themselves in these two streams? Morimura's
work shows the conflicting stance of a Japanese artist in the converging
Western and Japanese arts and culture. It is interesting to read his works and
think about these questions.
2013年2月7日 星期四
Fotanian Open Studio
It was
the second time for me to participate the Fotanian Open Studio event. It is an annual activity for local artists who have studios in the
Fotan to disclose their works to the general public. In my point of view, this
experience was similar to treasure hunting. As I didn’t select some particular “must
visit” artists, I could discover some “unknown” artist and their artworks by
using the map. Walking through the industrial building, using the cargo lift
and finding studio with unexpected mindset, these constructed a fun art
treasure hunting experience to me.
The
industrial activities are almost faded out in Hong Kong. Much space in industrial
buildings is empty and the amount of rent is much lower than urban area. The
invasion of artists into the industrial buildings is actually adding
characteristics to this original dying region and also help breeds the local art development.
The coexistence of these two kind of activities, indeed, reveals the high rent
problem faced by the Hong Kong artists in reality. In this visit, not only the
working situation and environment of artists are shown, the daily operations of
the industrial area, “unique” smell are also recorded in our memory.
Unlike
visiting the well-established exhibition in museum, the open studio is more
approachable for visitors. We can get closer to the display without some line
surrounding it and there is no security guard to monitor our acts but artists
and assistants. Visitors can feel free to talk with artists and it is more
interactive. Also,
studios
are places for creation and home-liked base. Other than appreciating the art
pieces, we can have a glance on the working environment of artists.
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A talk with Wilson Shieh |
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Style of Anita Mui in 1980s' |
Other than the figure painting, Shieh is working on acrylic painting in recent stage. Words become an important element in the painting and that is a huge difference with Shieh’s figure painting before. Most of them relate to political issues, for example the transformation of the ruling class of Chinese government and the performance of the Chief Executive. To me, the recent creations of Shieh highly concentrates on the expression of political view. More and more art works relate to political ideas. It raises my concern to question about the origin intention for the artist to do their works. “Will their works become political driven instead of using arts to express their feelings?” This is one of the myth or question raised after visiting Wilson Shieh’s exhibition.
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Transformation of Chinese Government |
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