geert lovink on Sat, 4 Aug 2001 20:51:45 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Kazue Kobata/David'Heilly's Buzz Club in PS1 (New York) |
(David d'Heilly, a nettimer from the first hour and documentary film maker and critic in Tokyo sent me the URL of this New York Times review. It must be an amazing show. Congratulations, David! /geert) http://www.ps1.org/cut/current.html July 1 -- September, 2001 P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center presents Buzz Club: News from Japan, an exhibition exploring the urban sensibilities of contemporary Japanese media culture. This exhibition features works by more than 100 artists, commercial designers and anonymous makers of streetwise scenes who are directly involved with digital media or who use technology-based techniques and strategies to approach traditional artistic disciplines. Animation, cell phone art, fashion, sculpture, anime, films, elaborate graphics, popular action figurines and models, electronic music and sound and light installations are all part of this exhibition. Curated by P.S.1 Adjunct Curator Kazue Kobata and filmmaker/critic David d'Heilly, Buzz Club: News from Japan is the largest exhibition of Japanese pop culture creators ever assembled outside of Japan. In one Buzz Club gallery is a 70-foot-long beehive structure -- a humming metropolis of hexagonal cells that visitors can climb and enter. There, visitors can interact with everything from commercial video games to a meticulously hand-drawn panorama of Tokyo. The enormous honeycomb structure, made of 2.5'-wide hexagonal tubes made of structural cardboard, is a site for hundreds of customized installations that represent the diverse yet cohesive context of Japanese youth culture. Inside the hives, visitors will find unique works by young artists inspired by street culture. While each section of the hive forms an isolated, atomized world, these cells are structurally and conceptually interdependent. A second gallery features five successive performance-based exhibitions by artists who cross and confound genres: works range from pop music acts and graphic installations to fashion remixing and large media art installations. This series of solo exhibitions by some of Japan's leading multidisciplinary pop culture creators will appear in two-week cycles. The Super Lover Animation Life, an installation by designer Hideyuki Tanaka, sets the artist 's sensationally popular Prince Tongha pop group (with performer Pierre Taki and DJ Tasaka) in a surreal landscape produced by their iconic Super Lovers clothing line. Electronic music and graphic design outfit Delaware will rehearse and perform Bit Map Beats daily in a room bedazzled with thousands of CD cases, each filled with strange icons, to create a massive pixelated mosaic. Cutting-edge fashion team Nakagawa Sochi presents New York Wearables Cut and Paste Re-Cycle, a public garment-making project that evolves as used clothes brought by visitors or collected through various events within the city are altered and "remixed" on site and displayed, then auctioned in the gallery. Gabin Ito, a legend in video game creation, presents Zero Gravity Sports for the IT Era, an inventive series of sports with rules that defy common sense and sensibility. Finally, Toshio Iwai, a leading media artist in Europe and Japan, will install Photon, an interactive media installation involving optical handheld musical devices that read lights installed in the gallery and produce them as sounds. Several artists will contribute animations to a growing web-based component of Buzz Club: News from Japan, which will be accessible at www.ps1.org for the duration of the exhibition. Discussions, performances and activities related to this exhibition will held throughout the summer. Some participating artists include: Hideyuki Tanaka, Pierre Taki, Delaware, Nakagawa Sochi, Gabin Ito, Toshio Iwai, Exonemo, Yuka Wake, Taka Furuhashi, Sousei Kazuki, Tycoon Graphics, Tugboat, TGV, Groovisions, Kouji Morimoto, Katsuhiro Otomo, Masaki Tamra, Ryota Kuwakubo, Hiroshige Fukuhara, Katsuya Terada, Midori Araki, Ages 5 & Up, Kyupi Kyupi, Tokiharu Noto, Stereotype Produkts, Keiji Ito, Taiyo Matsumoto, Takayuki Takeya, Kouki Hasei, Hironori Murai, Hanako Kunishi, Hitomi Uchikura, Dai Okazaki/Smelly, Nihon-Ishina and Motoshi Sato. This exhibition is made possible in part by The Japan Foundation. ROOM 1 Schedule ROOM 1 features five successive performance-based exhibitions by artists who cross and confound genres: works range from pop music acts and graphic installations to fashion remixing and large media art installations. During the exhibition, they create live installations, performances, workshops and active exchange with the audience. Each of these presentations develops over a one-week to three-week cycle: July 1 - July 8: Hideyuki Tanaka Loversí Garden is an installation by designer Hideyuki Tanaka. The artist places Prince Tonghaís VJ/DJ pop group in a surreal landscape produced by the iconic Super Lovers clothing line. July 11 - July 22: Delaware Electronic music and graphic design group Delaware perform three live sets of Bit Map Beats daily in a room bedazzled with thousands of CD cases, each filled with cryptic icons, to create a massive pixelated mosaic. July 25 - August 12: Nakagawa Sochi Cutting-edge fashion team Nakagawa Sochi presents New York Wearables Cut and Paste Re-Cycle, a public garment-making project that recycles used clothes, brought by visitors or collected through various events within the city, into ìremixedî outfits displayed on site. August 15 - August 26: Gabin Ito Gabin Ito, a legend in video game creation, presents Zero Gravity Sports for the IT Era, an inventive series of sports with rules that defy common sense. August 29 - September 9: Toshio Iwai Toshio Iwai, a leading media artist in Europe and Japan, is installing Photon, an interactive installation of optical handheld musical devices that react aurally to light in the gallery. --- http://www.nytimes.com/2001/08/03/arts/design/03BUZZ.html Becoming Immersed in Japan's Wired Pop Culture By HOLLAND COTTER "Buzz Club: News From Japan" at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center is a tasty buffet of a show, a lunch of bite-size snacks, a combination obento and candy box. Taken singly, the choices may leave you a little hungry, but together they make a stimulating meal. Organized by Kazue Kobata, adjunct curator at P.S. 1, and David d'Heilly, a filmmaker and critic, "Buzz Club" is billed as "the largest exhibition of Japanese pop culture creators ever seen outside Japan," which is a little hard to believe. It is all confined to one not-big room, with a second gallery given over to a succession of single projects. The secret is compression. Most of the work - from sound pieces to pocket-size sculptures to a Barbie fashion show made in the last year or so by artists in their 20's - is ultracompact or barely there. And everything is installed in a 70-foot-long unitary structure of compartment- size hexagonal cells, like a beehive. Conceived by the P.S. 1 senior curator, Klaus Biesenbach, and built by Yasuyuki Ise, the hive sits in the middle of the gallery. It's meant to be climbed on, walked on, peered into, even crawled into, with the idea that the work in each cell be experienced up close, one-on-one. A few cells are total-immersion environments. The young artist Taka Furuhashi has covered the walls of his space with a charming, jittery mural of Tokyo. You view it the way he drew it, lying on your back. The hive form neatly reflects the decentralized, nonhierarchical character of Japan's wired pop culture, a nonstop explosion of mechanical toys and digital gadgets, infantilized cuteness and fantasized violence in which art, fashion, design, pornography, politics and technology indissolubly mix. So where to begin? Anywhere is good, and preferably with a gallery handout identifying each numbered cell by contents or artists. Cell No. 1 is devoted to cell phone art, a gallery- free, dial-up genre that includes not only sounds but also visual images on a phone's menu panel. The few phones on display aren't fully functional, but you get the idea, and the names of the artist groups - Holy CowBoy, Ascii Corporation, Ages 5 & Up - are pop gems. Sound-and-video comes next, some of it in the guise of another hot medium, advertising. A group named Manual of Errors specializes in "original compositions and music for commercials." (You can sample their wares on headphones.) Tycoon Graphics presents a slick promotional video for an imaginary King Don Champagne, with a story line involving a black athlete, an ambisexual model and a heavy disco beat. Other pieces concentrate more squarely on music, which can be a form of self-advertising à la MTV. In Toshio Iwai's "Seeing Debussy," the artist performs "Claire de Lune" as colored lights appear to burst from the piano. And among several graphically diverting CD-ROM and Internet pieces by young bands, those by Prince Tongha and Delaware - the latter describes its style as "folk music for the Web age" - are especially groovy. Japanese youth culture is the show's primary focus, and it's like no other culture on earth that I know of. Technologically beyond sophistication, avidly unadult, it has turned early preadolescence, a time of unpressured bliss in traditional Japanese child-rearing, into an intensely imagined, profoundly escapist alternative lifestyle. Evidence of this is everywhere. One cell is devoted to Izumi Eada's "Sushi on Seals," a blandly adorable preschoolish book that has attracted a cult following among teenage girls. Another is a shrine to "Junk Sweets" by Midori Araki, former editor of the Japanese edition of Elle, which combines diaristic poetry with photographs of everyday objects - a hamburger, a set of dentures, a ball of yarn - made from pastry. Not that childhood is all innocence. Gabon Ito gives it a sardonic gloss in a line of tot-size chain saws. And it turns indescribably weird in a made- for-television animation by the protean Hideyuki Tanaka (he created Prince Tongha and the Super Lovers clothing line), which combines giggling babies, bad-guy executives and a grande dame fishlike character in a trippy, bad-dream narrative. And there's sex, circulating through the show like half-suppressed heat. It surfaces in comic book images by Katsuya Terada that suggest fusions of Arthur Rackham and Tom of Finland, in the "contemporary netsuke" of Takayuki Takeya with their grotesque couplings, and in a hilarious safe-sex video by the members of the gay and lesbian group called the Biters, all of whom are prostitutes and performance artists. They are also political activists. As such they are a minority presence in the exhibition, along with the performance artist Minoru Torihada, who makes a striking local debut. Whether appearing on posters as Hitler or Yukio Mishima or filmed sitting astride a torpedo in a war museum, in his ferociously suave pseudo-fascist persona, Mr. Torihada pushes historical and cultural buttons that no one else in "Buzz Club" comes anywhere near. He's one artist - the Biters are others - who would benefit from being seen in a more expansive setting. (Someone should give them solo gigs in New York.) So, in general, would video that requires a bit of air to make an impact. In terms of sheer presence, it is the traditional medium of sculpture and particularly sculpture of a dense, hypernaturalistic type that comes off best. The outstanding example is Mr. Takeya's diminutive, surreal, staggeringly detailed image of a seal hunter skinning a Spielbergian extraterrestrial. (It comes with a video of the artist at work, as if to prove that so strange an object was made by hand.) Michiyo Kojima's figures of cats in silk kimonos, titled "Feline Saints," are worth lingering over. And a series of hats in the shape of lizard heads, designed by the chic fashion-team Nakagawa Sochi, are impossible to miss. Presumably inspired by Godzilla, they are every bit as creepy as they are cute. Creepy and cute might best describe the show as a whole, if any easy description would do, though none really will. As rag-tag as it is, "Buzz Club" has more going on, potentially if not actually, than exhibitions many times its size. Anyone who thinks that new Japanese art begins and ends with the "Superflat" Pop of the recent art exhibition in Los Angeles, so assiduously promoted of late, will learn differently here. The artists at P.S. 1 are a generation younger than the "Superflat" crew; in some ways they live in a different world. They're online, on the phone, on the runway, onstage. For many of them, the very categories "art" and "artist" are losing solidity, merging into other categories, fading off into space. A similar dynamic has been developing in American art, too, but far more slowly and cautiously. Where all this is headed no one knows, but "Buzz Club" offers at least a bite of the future. ``Buzz Club: News From Japan'' remains at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, 22-25 Jackson Avenue, at 46th Avenue, Long Island City, Queens, (718)784-2084, through Sept. 30. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net