Showing posts with label Yayoi Kusama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yayoi Kusama. Show all posts

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Create your own Obsessive Artwork


Creative promotion involves a lot of things.

But when a marketing campaign to promote the arts makes the public feel involved, the creative potential of the initial idea becomes unpredictable and all the more interesting.






Recreativeuk.com has come up with something new. REcreative asks you to

create your own obsessive artwork


and submit it here.



The best project will be chosen by a panel of judges including the Curator of the Exhibition Frances Morris, the Directors of Tate Modern and the South London Gallery; Chris Dercon and Margot Heller and Yayoi Kusama's studio.

The artist chosen will win a trip to Tokyo, Japan to visit Kusama’s studio later this year.


Now that is a challenge (for UK citizens and permanent residents). Considering the worldwide Kusama-mania these past few months, the idea REcreative UK had will probably turn into a very successful event.

Tokyo is a great place !

Good luck with your submissions.


P.S. Should you win, feel free to ask questions about Yayoi Kusama's Japan anytime.



Thursday, 23 February 2012

What Tate Kids do not know

In the creative industries these days, a great emphasis is laid on the efforts that museums and art organisations make to share their knowledge to all. Public benefit. Education. Access to the arts from an early age.

It is not only important, it is vital. In truth, it is essential for finances, too. Grants get someplace else if your organisation does not make these creative efforts. Private and institutional benefit is then endangered.

So, we have got the Tate Kids. The MoMA kids. Many kids. Play and learn, that is the philosophy behind any educational programme designed by a museum. Do kids really play? Do they enjoy? Do they learn something about art?, are questions which curators in the Education Departments around the globe ask themselves all the time.

We have already shown one great idea for kids which we had discovered recently, the Obliteration Room, created in connection with Yayoi Kusama’s exhibition “Look Now, See Forever”, at the Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, 2011. That looked like fun. At present, Tate Modern in London is doing something similar for the Kusama exhibition public.

We found though a great item for kids’ workshops right in the heart of Osaka, Japan. If you read the Dots Obsession, then you already know that The National Museum of Art, Osaka is also hosting a Yayoi Kusama exhibition.

So, check this out. Kiyomi Seki, assistant curator in the Education Department at NMAO Osaka made a real Kusama Kaleidoscope. Recalling tricks her teachers were using in science class to show students various geometrical patterns, she went to Tokyu Hands department store and bought plastic mirror sheets (or polycarbonate mirror sheets). They are about 30cm x 30 cm, can be easily cut in 9 pieces. Kiyomi used 6 pieces to make a Magic Box, which we decided to call the Kusama Kaleidoscope. She then fit the edges using strips of silver book binding tape.

On the inside, the box looks like a mirror room. On the outside, it is blue. The blue paper covering the box on the outside can be scratched. Kiyomi created Kusama shapes, such as tulips, or dots. She simply scratched the surface. Then she painted the scratched contours. At the end, she cut one little corner of the box, so that kids can have a look inside.

The light pervades the magic box through the scratches, creating inside a myriad of tulips, circles, squares, dots, anything that has been scratched on the outside. The colours filling this mirror space, are the ones applied by Kiyomi.

Very simple.

Now we have got to be honest and say that once we saw these boxes, we were so mesmerized that we went to check again the Gleaming Lights of the Souls mirror room at the Osaka exhibition. The real thing. Well, Kusama kaleidoscopes for kids are better.

This was a great idea Kiyomi had for the kids workshop this year in Osaka. And we are not the only ones loving her ideas. Masahiro Yasugi, curator of the Kusama exhibition, the cutest arts pro in the country, was so excited about the magic boxes, he could not stop looking inside. We would not be surprised if we saw him at the kids workshop next month !

If you are from Tate and are reading this, you might consider picking up the phone and getting in touch with Kiyomi Seki, a creative member of the staff at The National Museum of Art, Osaka. Jo Mazzotta also might just love the Magic Box idea.



Cheers.


( Later edit - 26.02.2012:

We did get a visit from Tate in London. Here, on the blog. :)
Sharna Jackson, editor at Tate Kids, tweeted to her followers:

These are nice Kusama-inspired kaleidoscopes - [Author didn't need to call me (Tate Kids) tho, gosh. Sassy.]

Thanks, Sharna. So so cool.)



Wednesday, 8 February 2012

Yayoi Kusama Tate Exhibition Opening In Pictures

Deja vu? Most known print and broadcast media in the UK featuring the Yayoi Kusama exhibition opening story with identical shots: a way of publicity which is probably having the desired impact on the viewers. You can go see her works in London starting from Thursday, 9 February 2012.




Yayoi Kusama Tate Opening on BBC here



Yayoi Kusama Tate Opening in The Guardian here



Yayoi Kusama Tate Opening in The Independent here



Yayoi Kusama Tate Opening in The Telegraph here



Crowding at the Press Conference on 7 February 2012:


Yayoi Kusama and curator Frances Morris, in pictures here


Check out a new video about Yayoi Kusama




on the Tate Youtube Channel here



Allegedly, Yayoi Kusama has not been out of Japan for twelve years, and remember she will turn 83 in March. It must have been a long flight, so let us give her a round of applause !

See also the Japan exhibition in pictures in a previous post.



Monday, 16 January 2012

Yayoi Kusama and the dots obsession - Osaka 2012


The National Museum of Art Osaka is now hosting the works of Yayoi Kusama, avant-garde "artist and novelist", born in 1929 in Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. View her works on her official website, on NMAO museum's site and on Asahi Shinbun Daily Newspaper's site (main sponsor).

After curating Renoir, tradition and innovation (2010) and The Complete Posters of Tadanori Yokoo (2010) exhibitions, Masahiro Yasugi, a museum-profit record-breaker at NMAO, has taken charge once again.

Taking photographs is permitted in most exhibition rooms.



With all my love for the tulips, I pray forever by Yayoi Kusama, 2011
草間彌生 《チューリップに愛をこめて、永遠に祈る》
Courtesy of The National Museum of Art, Osaka (current exhibition)

Whether polka dots make you think of Dexter's blood spatter, or are reminding you of Brigitte Bardot's femininity, it is fair to say that they have become Kusama's signature.



Dots: Brigitte Bardot vs Dexter




In terms of style, one cannot fail to notice the resemblance to Takashi Murakami's works. Murakami has displayed his works at the Versailles Palace in 2010, stirring controversy among critics but not so much among young fans. You can see more images in the Guardian.














Takashi Murakami @ Versailles (2010)



Both of them also enjoy a business collaboration with Louis Vuitton.

Many of Kusama's monochromatic works using manga-brush for silkscreen printing on canvas or acrylics on canvas, display women's broken features, which, even though lacking the emotional heaviness of the subject, make us think of Picasso, and his work Weeping Woman (1937) from the Tate Collection.


Women in a Dream [TWZSA] & First Love [SWTUE] by Yayoi Kusama (2005)
草間彌生 《夢の中の女たち[TWZSA] 》&《初恋 [SWTUE]



Pablo Picasso, Weeping Woman (1937)
© Tate Collection



Patterns like the one below remind of Gustav Klimt's style from the mural painting The Tree of Life at the Secession in Vienna.



I Who Was Looking Hard at God, by Yayoi Kusama, 2011
草間彌生 《神をみつめていたわたし》


The Tree of Life, Gustav Klimt, 1909



The explosion of stickers on white surfaces at Brisbane Gallery of Modern Art (Australia) reveal even more Yayoi Kusama's playfulness, she makes differences vanish and dreams unify all edges.



Installation views of The obliteration room 2011
as part of ‘Yayoi Kusama: Look Now, See Forever’,
Brisbane Gallery of Modern Art, 2011
© Yayoi Kusama, Yayoi Kusama Studio Inc.
Photographs: Mark Sherwood




YayOi Ku$ama and the dOt$ Ob$e$$iOn - O$aka



Welcome to the Osaka exhibition !




Yayoi Kusama Eternity of Eternal Eternity at NMAO 2012
catalogue, flyer, list of exhibited works, museum events



Exhibition banner stand


Polka-dotted space


more dots


dots are a medium, an equalizer, a standardizer


everything becomes absorbed in this obsessional dotscape


dots reach the upper floors


shapes resembling Miyazaki's Kodama-s show up


they get round & take flight


dotscape trying to escape



The exhibition space ends with a dazzling experience inside Gleaming Lights of the Souls, a Steppenwolf - like gigantic mirror-space of a Magic Theatre (mixed media, 2008).

Related links:


Yayoi Kusama exhibition at Serpentine Gallery, London, 2000





Yayoi Kusama: Flowers that bloom at midnight, by Evelyne Politanoff, Huffington Post, 12 December 2011


Interview Yayoi Kusama, by Helen Sumpter, in TimeOut London, 2012







Love Forever, Yayoi Kusama 1958-1968, MoMA exhibition web page, 1998






There has been a boom in Yayoi KUSAMA major exhibitions in 2011-2012:

Japan:

Eternity of Eternal Eternity, The National Museum of Art, Osaka, Japan, 7 January- 8 April 2012 (curated by Masahiro Yasugi, supported by Asahi Shinbun Daily Newspaper)



Overseas:

Tate Modern, London, 9 February- 5 June 2012 (curated by Frances Morris and Rachel Taylor, supported by Louis Vuitton, see press release here)

Centre Pompidou, Paris, 10 October 2011-9 January 2012 (supported by KENZO Parfums, see press release here) - see an one-hour video created by the Centre Pompidou here.

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 12 July- 30 September 2012


Gagosian Gallery, Rome, 25 March - 7 May 2011

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, 11 May - 12 September 2011

Saturday, 17 December 2011

Behind the scenes: Upcoming 35th Anniversary exhibition, NMAO Osaka

This is about the making of the Collection Catalogue. About the pencils, the scissors and the glue.



2012 NMAO Catalogue work in progress

©The Bosa Bosa Review 2011


The National Museum of Art Osaka (NMAO) will be celebrating its 35th anniversary with a two-month exhibition, The Allure of the Collection, opening on 21 April 2012. Around 250 works will be on display and a new catalogue will be published to assist the visitors.

All commentaries are currently being updated, and it is expected that the well versed Christopher Stevens will take on the English translation of the essays.

Inspired by Jo Mazzotta from Tate, and in general, by the world's museums' efforts to improve their transparency online, The Bosa Bosa Review will introduce its readers to a number of works from the NMAO collection.

Texts in English authored by The Bosa Bosa Review will be uploaded over the coming weeks, once the intellectual igneous differentiation is done, that is the chemical change occurring during the melting, cooling, erupting, placing, replacing of the thinking, the writing, the trimming and the copy-pasting.

So stay tuned~

***********************************

More info from NMAO:

Upcoming exhibition: Yayoi KUSAMA Eternity of Eternal Eternity, 7 January- 8 April 2012.



Yayoi Kusama upcoming exhibition
 @ The National Museum of Art, Osaka


For those interested, Yayoi Kusama's works are also being exhibited at

Centre Pompidou, Paris, 10 October 2011-9 January 2012
Tate Modern, London, 9 February- 5 June 2012

Enjoy !