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This is a past display. Go to current displays

Jiro Takamatsu, Oneness of Cedar 1970. Tate. © Estate of Jiro Takamatsu, courtesy Yumiko Chiba Associates, Tokyo.

A View From Tokyo: Between Man and Matter

Discover how sculptors working in Japan, Europe, and the United States in the 1970s inspired and influenced each other

The decades following the Second World War were a time of radical experimentation for Japanese artists. Many of the groups who emerged during this period focused on actions and performance. In the late 1960s, however, Jiro Takamatsu began to make sculptures that explored the inherent properties of materials such as cedar and concrete. Soon afterwards his students, including Lee Ufan and Koshimizu Susumu, started to exhibit together. Working with raw materials such as metal and wood, they laid works on the floor or leaned them against the wall, rather than using the pedestal or the frame. Instead of ‘creating’ objects, they wanted to show the world as it was by making minimal interventions on materials. In 1973 the group became known as ‘Mono-ha’, or ‘School of Things’.

These artists had a number of opportunities to exchange ideas and experiences with western artists. One of the most significant was the 1970 Tokyo Biennale, ‘Between Man and Matter’. The European and North American artists whose work is displayed here were among those who travelled to Tokyo. The exhibition enabled Japanese and western artists to meet, experience each other’s work, and share ideas.

This is one of a series of rooms at Tate Modern, each offering ‘a view from’ a different city. They focus on a period when new approaches to art-making emerged, developing locally and in dialogue with artists from other parts of the world

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 4 West
Room 5

Getting Here

13 June 2016 – 17 November 2024

Free

Nalini Malani, In Search of Vanished Blood  2012–20

In Search of Vanished Blood 2012 is a room-sized installation consisting of six synchronised projected films, a soundscape and five rotating transparent cylinders made of a type of polycarbonate plastic known as Mylar; these have paintings of animals and mythological figures on their inside surface. As the films are projected through the cylinders, which rotate at four revolutions per minute, shadows form across the animations and are cast around the gallery walls. Produced for documenta 13 in 2012, this is one of a number of works involving film projections and rotating reverse-painted transparent cylinders which the artist calls ‘video/shadow plays’, referring to the narratives and layers that are unveiled through the duration of the films and soundscape. It gives voice to women in Greek and Hindu mythologies, lamenting histories of gendered violence – particularly in times of modern conflict – and clashing ideals of dominating nationalisms.

1/1
artworks in A View From Tokyo: Between Man and Matter

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T15837: In Search of Vanished Blood
Nalini Malani In Search of Vanished Blood 2012–20
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