NEW YORK, NY.- In 1968, amid an economic boom, many in Japan registered widespread discontent over social inequalities. At the same time, the country was roiled by protests against the Vietnam War and the upcoming renewal of a treaty extending American occupation. These circumstances mark the point of departure for For a New World to Come: Experiments in Japanese Art and Photography, 19681979, the first comprehensive exhibition to focus upon a critical moment when Japanese artists and photographers, sensing that their traditional practices were no longer valid, began experimenting with the possibilities of camera-based practices, laying the foundations for contemporary art in Japan.
For a New World to Come is on view at New York Universitys Grey Art Gallery from September 11 to December 5, 2015 and
Japan Society Gallery from October 9, 2015 to January 10, 2016.
Spanning the two New York venues are some 350 photographs, photography books and journals, paintings, sculptures, videos, and a film-based installation, many shown for the first time in New York. Works by 29 artists and photographers are framed within a global context, illustrating Japans participation in an international dialogue on new practices that incorporated photography.
By adopting 1968 as year zero, the exhibition charts not only political and social turbulence, but also several landmark exhibitions of photography that generated momentum for the medium. Foremost among these was Photography 100 Years: A History of Photographic Expressions of the Japanese, a massive survey organized in part by the photographers, Takuma Nakahira, and Kōji Taki, who would found the independent journal Provoke. While Photography 100 Years traced the making of modern (kindai) Japan mainly through fine arts and documentary photography, Provoke deconstructed the medium, reflecting the eras embrace of a fully contemporary (gendai) aesthetic. Soon in 1970, the legendary 10th Tokyo Biennale Between Man and Matter demonstrated to Japanese audiences a range of conceptual use of the camera, forming an important aspect of then-emerging contemporary art.
Against this backdrop, For a New World to Come traces parallel and at times overlapping developments by photographers and artists that would emerge out of the initial experiments with the camera of the late 1960s. Some were led to explore the flow of time and the intangibility of space through conceptual photographic series and installation or performance works. Others, for the first time in Japan, increasingly relied on the camera to capture introspective and deeply personal journeys.
For a New World to Come has been curated by Yasufumi Nakamori, Associate Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, which organized the exhibition. The quality and depth of MFA Houstons photography holdings, reflected in the exhibition, are complemented by exceptional loans from institutions such as the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo; the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography; and Tokyo Polytechnic University.
Japan Society Gallery has long advanced a better understanding of photography and art during the postwar period in Japan, including the work of two of the most important figures in this exhibition, Daidō Moriyama and Shōmei Tōmatsu, says Amy Poster, Interim Consulting Director, Japan Society Gallery. In 1999, we presented the first retrospective exhibition of Moriyamas photographs anywhere in the world and six years later introduced Tōmatsu to New Yorkers. Now we are again privileged to present new scholarship on a period that resonates to a surprising degree today.
This exhibition extends the Greys history of presenting avant-garde work from Japan, especially that of previously under-represented artists, said Lynn Gumpert, director of the Grey Art Gallery, which has presented such exhibitions as Electrifying Art: Atsuko Tanaka 1954-1968 (2004) and Against Nature: Japanese Art in the Eighties (1990). The founder of our museum, Abby Weed Grey, collected experiments in modernism from around the world, including some 80 Japanese woodcuts. We are proud to carry on Mrs. Greys spirit by partnering with Japan Society to bring these bold works to New York for the first time.
A number of influential works from the period are presented in complementary ways in both the presentation at Grey Art Gallery and at Japan Society Gallery. Among these is For A Language to Come (1970), Takuma Nakahiras iconic photo book and the inspiration for the exhibition title. This book, also represented by related photographic prints and digital moving image, will be a revelation to many visitors, its grainy and blurry (are-bure-boke) images printed full-bleed across pages teeming with disquieting scenes of everyday urban life. Another milestone featured in both venues is Toshio Matsumotos experimental film For the Damaged Right Eye (1968), where scenes from student protests, a transvestites daily activities, and Tokyo nightlife reel by, set to various `found sounds, including those from popular songs and protest chants.
Japan Society Gallerys presentation of For a New World to Come encompasses nearly two hundred pieces, unfurled across successive themed sections that highlight the upheaval of the years 1968-70, the assimilation of the camera into conceptual artistic practices, and the unprecedented turn toward introspective uses of photography in Japan.
The first work encountered is Toshio Matsumotos experimental film, For the Damaged Right Eye. Originally presented with three 16-mm projectors, its pictorial themes reverberate throughout the first gallery, which zero in on the tumult of the late 1960s. Highlights include Kiyoji Ōtsujis enigmatic image Showroom for Blank Space (1968) and Daidō Moriyamas grainy nighttime shots of the aftermath of a car accident from his series, Accident (1969), published in Moriyamas monthly column in the magazine Asahi Camera.
Later sections of For a New World to Come focus on how artists of the late 1960s and 1970s embraced the camera to explore conceptual issues of time and space. Exemplifying this trend, in 1968 Hitoshi Nomura erected a nearly 28-foot tall stack of cardboard boxes in front of the Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art. Designed to fail, the tower began a slow collapse, which Nomura proceeded to photograph. (The resulting series of eight photographs, titled Tardiology, is a new addition to For a New World to Come, which originated in Houston, Texas.)
Another highlight is Tatsuo Kawaguchis powerful Land and Sea (1970), a stark meditation on the circularity of time. This series captures the displacement of heavy wooden planks anchored to a shoreline as the tide rolled in and out over a three-day period, with the precise hour, minute, and second recorded for each image. Land and Sea was originally produced for the groundbreaking 10th Tokyo Biennale Between Man and Matter.
Recreated for the Japan Society Gallerys presentation is artist Keiji Uematsus site-specific installation Cutting (1971), which locks two vertically-stacked and slightly misaligned wooden beams into place between the gallery floor and ceiling, making visible the unseen forces of tensility, gravity, and equilibrium that surround us. The work is shown in conjunction with three large photo diptychs of 1973, which document Uematsu incorporating his own body into the sculpture and installation.
Other highlights at Japan Society include Miyako Ishiuchis large photographs from her series Apartment (1977-1978), dark, tough images taken inside Tokyos crumbling postwar apartment complexes that reveal the shadow side of Japans postwar prosperity, and Araki Nobuyoshis photocopied and unique erotic books, as well as his seminal photo book, Sentimental Journey (1971), which documents private moments from his own honeymoon.