頭山ゆう紀参加のグループ展「COMTEMPLATION」のご案内

アメリカのインディアナ州にあるギャラリー・pictura galleryで開催される「COMTEMPLATION」展に
写真集『境界線13』の頭山ゆう紀さんが出展します。

この展覧会は副題が「Emerging Female Photographers from Japan」という通り
日本人女性写真家を紹介する展覧会でもあり、キュレーションを竹内万里子さんとジェームス中川さんがしています。

ご機会ありましたらぜひお立ち寄りください。
また、現地にお知り合いがいらっしゃる方はご紹介いただけたら幸いです。
よろしくお願いいたします。


会期

2月3日(金) 〜 3月31日(土)

アーティストトーク: 3月8日(木) 19時〜

会場

pictura gallery

122 W 6th St  Bloomington, IN 47404 USA
HP : http://www.picturagallery.com/


CONTEMPLATION: Emerging Female Photographers from Japan

 

Photographs depict no more than what is visible. Yet at the same time they possess the uncanny ability to reveal the invisible.  Just as the hands of the clock mark the linear passing of time, photography can mark our memory, consciousness, desires, and emotions.  Beyond merely documenting the visible world, one of the photographers' roles is to create a space for reflecting and gazing upon such invisibilities. This exhibition introduces the work of four emerging Japanese female photographers who engage these invisibilities from various angles.

 

Tomoe Murakami stares at the boundary between the visible and the invisible through her ephemeral landscapes which are often filled with mist or clouds. By erasing and scratching the surface of her prints, Yuki Tawada uncovers a strength and inter-dependence which transcends the people and cities captured in her images.  It can be said that Murakami traces the limit of photography from the inside while Tawada does so from the outside.  In snap-shot photographs by Yuhki Toyama, everyone and everything look isolated while longing for the other. This is how she reveals the deeper darkness which swallows an individual even as he/she is not willing to admit it. Ai Takahashi's continuous shooting of  remote rural villages and their inhabitants illuminates the accumulated experience of place that runs perpendicular to our urban linear experience of time .

 

The title of this exhibition CONTEMPLATION comes from the Latin contemplatio meaning the "act of looking at" something.  In turn this stems from contemplo meaning "to gaze attentively, observe." More important is that its original meaning was "to mark out a space for observation (as an augur does)." These photographers, too, delineate from, within the real world a space for observation and contemplation of the invisible.  Viewing ourselves in this consecrated space we cannot help but reconsider our individual and collective pasts and futures.

 

Mariko Takeuchi, Curator

James Nakagawa, Co-Curator


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