Category: Japan

'Super 8' the video art exhibition. High concept? Yes. Movie tie-in? No.

July 7, 2011 |  6:30 am

Rosefeldt 
Video art is notoriously hard to show in art galleries. It can hog a lot of space, its sound can spill over into other rooms, and its equipment can be cumbersome (though lighter and cheaper with every year).

And that's not considering challenging content, like Brazilian artist Tunga's recent video of a bizarre, alchemy-fueled sexual encounter that makes David Lynch movies seem sweet and straightforward by comparison.

So when gallery owner Christopher Grimes had the idea of doing a broad sampling of international video art in his space in Santa Monica, he wanted to make the format, if not the content itself, more accessible. And he came up with a festival-style program as a way of working around the gallery's space limitations.

Starting Friday, the Christopher Grimes Gallery is presenting eight weeks of video art programming, each week featuring work from a different city curated by a different artist.

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Art review: Ori Gersht at Angles Gallery

June 16, 2011 |  7:20 pm

NightFly02
Known for his photographs of exploding floral still lifes, Tel Aviv-born, London-based Ori Gersht now takes a quieter, but no less probing tack. A survey of the artist’s work from the last five years is currently on view at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, but his latest exhibition at Angles Gallery brings together two very recent bodies of work that both circle around the specter of World War II.

Last year, Gersht traveled to Japan to photograph the iconic, yet short-lived cherry blossoms. Signaling the arrival of spring, the blossoming of these trees is celebrated with picnics and festivals. Bursting into paroxysms of pink and white flowers for only a couple of weeks, they are national symbols of evanescence and rebirth. Gersht worked mostly at night, using a digital camera especially sensitive to low light. The resulting images are eerie, often ghostly, and in some cases, breathtakingly beautiful.

While lovely images of cherry blossoms are hardly surprising, the artist approached the subject from two directions. He created large, dramatic photographs that summon the graphic clarity of Japanese woodblock prints enhanced with an unnatural, almost mystical glow. Despite their eerie stillness, these images seem to confirm the resilience of the cherry blossom as all-purpose national symbol. Its transience was used to justify sacrifice in World War II; its annual flowering symbolized renewal in the aftermath.

Gersht also printed more intimate images, in particular, close-ups of the blossoms, which are much grainier. They evoke pointillism, but also, more aptly, low-resolution digital files in which solid colors effloresce into their constituent reds, greens and blues. This texture reads like video static, suggesting that while the wide shot may project an uncommon beauty, up close the view is unearthly in a different way. This visual pollution serves as an analogue for the nuclear contamination that the cherry blossom’s beauty conceals. Although Gersht was referring to the lasting effect of post-World War II fallout — his project was completed in 2010 — the work takes on additional bittersweet resonance in the wake of recent events.

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Monster Mash: 'Book of Mormon' among Drama Desk winners; Getty Museum loses top antiquities curator

May 24, 2011 |  7:50 am

Mormon

Accolades: "The Book of Mormon" and "War Horse" were among the big winners at the Drama Desk awards on Monday. (Playbill)

Resigning: Karol Wight, the Getty Museum's senior curator for antiquities, is leaving the organization to become the executive director of the Corning Museum of Glass in upstate New York. (Los Angeles Times)

Art and commerce: New York's Museum of Modern Art has announced a two-year, multimillion-dollar sponsorship deal with Volkswagen. (Bloomberg)

Hard sell: The cast of Broadway's "Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark" will perform with Bono and the Edge on the season finale of "American Idol" on Fox. (Broadway World)

Giving: Tenor Plácido Domingo is donating $200,000 to relief efforts for parts of Japan affected by the March earthquake and tsunami. (Kyodo News)

Free of charge: A select group of museums around the country are offering free admission to active duty military members and their families for the summer. (San Diego Union Tribune)

Recovered: A rare painting stolen 40 years ago that found its way to the Speed Art Museum in Louisville, Ky., will be returned to its rightful owner. (WDRB News)

Hair-raising: David Mamet is set to write and direct an HBO movie on convicted music producer Phil Spector, with Al Pacino and Bette Midler expected to star. (Variety)

Also in the L.A. Times: Kirk Douglas and his wife, Anne, have awarded a new $1-million matching grant to Center Theatre Group; theater critic Charles McNulty reviews "A Dram of Drummhicit" at La Jolla Playhouse.

-- David Ng

Photo: A scene from "The Book of Mormon" at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre in New York. Credit: Joan Marcus

Japan tsunami seriously damaged Matsushima cultural site

March 27, 2011 | 11:30 am

800px-Yōshū_Chikanobu_Matsushima_in_Rikuzen_Province Partly because of its deep Shinto and Buddhist roots, Japanese culture exhibits a distinctive aesthetic relationship to nature. Rather than an assembly of individual parts seen and experienced in isolation, nature is a dynamic whole witnessed in constant flux. Change is the only permanence.

Traumatic change obviously came in the form of the recent Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. The death toll is mounting. In the region of Matsushima, just up the coast from the hard-hit city of Sendai, upwards of 22,000 have been reported dead or missing from the devastating March 11 tsunami.

Matsushima also suffered another awful blow. Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs reports serious damage to the prized landscape of the region, which includes the coastal villages of Shichigahama and Shiogama and the islands in its bay. Matsushima is among 353 national treasures, important cultural properties and other artistic monuments battered by the disaster. (A full list distributed by the cultural agency is here.) The offshore epicenter of the 9.0 quake was east of Matsushima.

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