gutai: splendid playground
Source: A/N Blog |
Source: Guggenheim |
“Don’t imitate others!” and “Engage in the newness!” are just two of the
signature slogans of the Gutai Art Association, founded in July 1954 by
Jiro Yoshihara. The Gutai—which translates to “concreteness”—artists
dared to breakthrough the boundaries presented by traditional Japanese
art. As their name suggests, the artists directly engaged with concrete
materials (such as remote-control toys, sand, light bulbs, and paper
screens) to create a new, never before seen, kind of art. The creative
genius of these avant-garde artists manifested itself in the form of
various mediums including, but not limited to, painting, installation
and performance art, experimental film, and environmental art. Gutai: Splendid Playground
explores the works of these artists, created over a span of
two-decades, and features an enormous installation by Motonaga Sadamasa
composed of a series of plastic tubes filled with colored water. The
structure, created specifically for the Guggenheim’s rotunda, invites
visitors to look up and use these “brush strokes” to create their own
individual composition.
Text Source: A/N Blog
Labels: installation, japan, new york
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enjoyable art
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