WASHINGTON, DC.- Performance and installation artist Chiharu Shiota, Japans representative at the 56th Venice Biennale in 2015, invites the public to view the creation of her latest work during an Aug. 1821 public installation at the
Smithsonians Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. Perspectives: Chiharu Shiota will transform everyday objectsalmost 4 miles of red yarn, nearly 400 shoes and handwritten notesinto a dramatic and emotionally charged installation that embodies the artists personal memories.
Shiota will be joined in the Sackler pavilion by exhibition curator and associate curator of contemporary Asian art Carol Huh, and visitors are encouraged to submit questions for both the artist and curator through the museums Twitter handle, @FreerSackler, using the hashtag #perspectives. Video and images of the installation process will be made available online at asia.si.edu/shiota.
The installation, part of the Sacklers contemporary art series Perspectives, officially opens Aug. 30, and will be on view through June 7, 2015.
Currently based in Berlin, Shiota (b. 1972, Osaka, Japan) is best known for her large-scale yet intricate installations that explore the relationships between the human body, memory and loss. Trained in drawing and sculpture, Shiotas practice developed during her studies in performance art under Marina Abramovic and Rebecca Horn. Since 1999, she has been gaining international acclaim for her site-specific installations and stage designs. Her work has been exhibited worldwide, including at the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (Sydney, 2013), Museum on the Seam (Jerusalem, 2013), Casa Asia (Barcelona, 2012), The National Museum of Art (Osaka, 2008), Neue Nationalgalerie (Berlin, 2006) and MoMA PS1 (New York, 2003), as well as the Biennials in Venice, Italy, and in Fukuoka and Yokohama, Japan.