Misa opens her own gallery
Jan. 14th, 2007 09:51 amHere are my two Tokyo flatmates, Shizu and Misako, back in 2001, when we briefly all shared a small flat in Meguro. The picture ran in a photo diary Relax magazine published. "I went to an opening in Saga at the Koyama Gallery," ran the caption, "and afterwards Shizu and I ate at a Korean barbecue with Misako of the gallery staff. It's true that one thing Tokyo really lacks is a New York-style gallery scene".

Well, five years later that New York-style gallery scene came one tiny step closer when, after ten years at Koyama, Misako left to open her own gallery, Misako & Rosen. The name combines Misako's name with her husband Jeffrey Rosen's (he works at Taka Ishii gallery, and I last ran into him at Frieze Art Fair).
Misako has chosen Minami-Otsuka as the district for her gallery. While not exactly wilderness, this north Tokyo district (one stop up from Ikebukuro on the Yamanote line) is more famous for its mosque and Pakistani curry stalls than galleries. As far as I know, Misa's is the only one there.

Misa launched in December with a painting show by Shimon Minamikawa. Photos of the space show a small, upstairs concrete-floored white cube. Other artists on the roster include Maya Hewitt, Nathan Hylden, Miki Mochizuka and Naotaka Hiro. The foreign names suggest a "Third Culture" approach, and Misa is featured in the January edition of that emblematically "Third Culture" magazine, the relaunched Japanese edition of Tokion. You can currently see her stall at Tokyo art fair Art@Agnes, in Room 201. Roger McDonald describes the fair here.
"As well as the usual 'Tokyo Power Galleries' -- Koyama Tomio, Koyanagi, Taka Ishii, Mizuma etc -- I was particularly interested to see works presented by new, younger galleries like takefloor and Misako + Rosen," Roger writes. "These two spaces shared a hotel room, and to my great relief, provided the only musical interlude among all the galleries - a video work showing on the hotel TV blared Jimi Hendrix songs."
Anyway, I just wanted to say yay Misa for actually following your vision through and setting up your own gallery! We'll make Tokyo an art town yet!

Well, five years later that New York-style gallery scene came one tiny step closer when, after ten years at Koyama, Misako left to open her own gallery, Misako & Rosen. The name combines Misako's name with her husband Jeffrey Rosen's (he works at Taka Ishii gallery, and I last ran into him at Frieze Art Fair).
Misako has chosen Minami-Otsuka as the district for her gallery. While not exactly wilderness, this north Tokyo district (one stop up from Ikebukuro on the Yamanote line) is more famous for its mosque and Pakistani curry stalls than galleries. As far as I know, Misa's is the only one there.
Misa launched in December with a painting show by Shimon Minamikawa. Photos of the space show a small, upstairs concrete-floored white cube. Other artists on the roster include Maya Hewitt, Nathan Hylden, Miki Mochizuka and Naotaka Hiro. The foreign names suggest a "Third Culture" approach, and Misa is featured in the January edition of that emblematically "Third Culture" magazine, the relaunched Japanese edition of Tokion. You can currently see her stall at Tokyo art fair Art@Agnes, in Room 201. Roger McDonald describes the fair here.
"As well as the usual 'Tokyo Power Galleries' -- Koyama Tomio, Koyanagi, Taka Ishii, Mizuma etc -- I was particularly interested to see works presented by new, younger galleries like takefloor and Misako + Rosen," Roger writes. "These two spaces shared a hotel room, and to my great relief, provided the only musical interlude among all the galleries - a video work showing on the hotel TV blared Jimi Hendrix songs."Anyway, I just wanted to say yay Misa for actually following your vision through and setting up your own gallery! We'll make Tokyo an art town yet!
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 12:20 pm (UTC)Otsuka used to be place where the old Taka Ishii was located before they moved. It's quite a lovely suburb but it loses in charm to Koto-ku hands down.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 12:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 03:31 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 04:04 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 04:27 pm (UTC)But this isn't as widely known as the "R" becoming an "L" among japanese immigrants, even though it itself is nothing typical for Japanese.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 04:50 pm (UTC)Biking or or riding the subway (if you got an extra ¥3,000....not including Maru) here to do a gallery day just really grates on me. I'd love to imagine Tokyo would one day be an art city....but ugh!
But thats enough cynicism...... art@agnes was great...
and more galleries even better.
Tokyo Art Beat review of Art @ Agnes
Date: 2007-01-14 05:25 pm (UTC)http://www.tokyoartbeat.com/tablog/entries.en/2007/01/artagnes_this_weekend_only.html
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-14 08:53 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-15 01:13 am (UTC)shopping for kitchen utensils in kappabashi or fabric in nippori are far more rewarding experiences.
(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-15 03:05 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-15 05:27 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-15 06:58 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2007-01-23 08:38 pm (UTC)And I wish she had opened this gallery last summer when I was actually living near Ikebukuro. That was a hop, skip, and jump away. Now it's thousands of miles away.