Monday, March 14, 2022

Day 3494: Fragile.


 

"Fragile": junk mail collage, digital.

 

 



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2GN2S ...

Highlights from Art Fair Tokyo 2022

Art Fair Tokyo is the largest art fair in Japan and the oldest in Asia, bringing together a wide range of artists and exhibitors. Now in it’s 17th iteration, the excitement is taking place this weekend (March 11 – 13) at Tokyo International Forum. Although Japan is beginning to relax their border controls, the country still remains closed to most tourists so we’re bringing you just a small selection of highlights from the city’s premier art showcase. 

  

Shohei Takasaki

Previously based in Portland and now Australia, the wild and colorful paintings of Shohei Takasaki are as hard to pin down as the artist himself, who walks a fine line between abstraction and figuration.

 


 

Keita Morimoto

In the paintings by artist Keita Morimoto, light illuminates his nondescript street scenes of Tokyo, except his sources of light are vending machines, fast food restaurants, electric signs in parking lots and other symbols of consumerist society. You can read more about him here.

 


 

Maho Takahashi

Combining her signature gold-leaf and her “inner-child” character Anoko, Maho Takahashi presented her version of the Fujin and Raijin: the fearsome gods of lightning and wind.

 


Meguru Yamaguchi

Known for his two-dimensional action-based brushstroke paintings, which are then transformed into three-dimensional sculptures, Brooklyn-based Meguru Yamaguchi’s works are always exciting to see. It’s been 8 years since we visited his studio.

 


Kanemaki Yoshitoshi

Sculptor Yoshitoshi Kanemaki wants you to know that the world is more complicated than we can ever comprehend. And his breathtaking wooden sculptures guide us towards an understanding that there are competing goods in this world; two sides that can never fully be reconciled. You can read more about him here.

 


Yuta Okuda

Yuta Okuda uses blotches of acrylic paint, which he then combines with miniscule, delicate pen drawings, to create petals and blossoms within each other. You can read more about his work here

 


Tanabe Chiku’unsai

Tanabe Chiku’unsai is a bamboo artist and craftsman that has been carrying on a family legacy that spans 4 generations. And where the 4th generation artist excels is in going places where his ancestors haven’t: creating large-scale, site specific installations that engulf and encompass the spaces they’re constructed in. He presented two large-scale sculptures at Art Fair Tokyo. You can read more about him here.

 

 
2GN2S#2

Members of Ukraine's Paralympic team hold a banner reading "peace for all."


 

 
 
 
A cute 5-minute video, Taking Flight, here.


 
Just because ...
 
 
Blue Heron

 
 


Smiles for Monday ...
 
 
Pi Monday (Monday, March 14th)

 

 

 

 
 



 

                                                               Thanks for coming by today.

 

 

4 comments:

john said...

I love the different shades of blue. It is as if there are lights illuminating or highlighting this piece. :-)

jacki long said...

Thanks, John. I am pleased with this one. ;o)

elenor said...

The title of your collage is brilliant. Aren't all humans so fragile when they are borne? How can broken souls be healed after experiencing violence?
Your article about the Art Fair Tokyo was very interesting, thanks!

jacki long said...

Thanks so much, Elenor. Yes, I liked "Fragile" too.
Sometimes I get lucky! Have a great week.