Japan saves music, banking, art
Sep. 23rd, 2008 01:10 pmThe nice folks at Paris / Tokyo label Sonore have drawn my attention to Doddodo, an act worthy of the "Matsuri-kei" label (which I invented fairly arbitrarily, but does seem to sum up a certain sound and attitude). This video by Sonore's Franck Stofer, filmed in May at Earthdom Shin-Okubo, gladdens my heart muchly. Doddodo's enormously fat and primal sound exemplifies all the good things CSS lost by getting too polished on their second album:
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Sonore are currently looking for somewhere for Doddodo to perform live in Berlin this December, so if you know of a good venue, tell them.
In other Japanese news, the nation has a new prime minister in the form of Taro Aso, has bailed out the American economy by acquiring several American banks and is currently hosting the Yokohama Triennale, which I'll be blogging about for the NYT on Friday.
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Sonore are currently looking for somewhere for Doddodo to perform live in Berlin this December, so if you know of a good venue, tell them.
In other Japanese news, the nation has a new prime minister in the form of Taro Aso, has bailed out the American economy by acquiring several American banks and is currently hosting the Yokohama Triennale, which I'll be blogging about for the NYT on Friday.
Re: Yokohama Triennale
Date: 2008-09-28 03:51 am (UTC)So you really need to attract the local population. Now, Yokohama is a big city and there are plenty of generally interested people that COULD be attracted, had the curators made a bit more of an effort to do so.
As I wrote in my review, this triennale is noteworthy mostly for what is missing, namely works that are "attractive" in the most basic sense, i.e. public magnets: eye-catching public artworks, works that are immediately enjoyable even without a long art education, photogenic works that look good in reviews and newspaper articles, or works that relate to local issues. Performances are well and fine, but can usually only be seen by a handful of people at a time, and most performances were concentrated to the busy opening weekend and are over already.
You quote one foreign reviewer as saying the show is boring, but that sort of misses the point. Foreign visitors are only a minor fraction of the paying audience anyway. The thing is that if Japanese reviewers also find it boring, they won't write much about it at all. For instance, my morning daily Asahi Shinbun had a token review on the first day, with a small black and white photograph and some quotes from the press kit, but no personal opinion whatsoever, and I haven't seen a single line about the triennale in the two weeks since.
The first triennale in 2001 became a big success mostly by accident, in a way totally unforeseen by the curators. Although a lot of the art was good, attendance was extremely poor for the first month and it looked like a disaster. Then, however, the huge but brittle grasshopper on the front of the Intercontinental Hotel suddenly became the talk of the town and was covered almost daily in the news: will it fly today or not? All of a sudden, the Triennale became a hot date spot for young couples in the Kanto area, and during the last few weeks there were Disneyland-like lines around the corner to several of the attractions (an hour to get into that John Bock room, for instance).
Unfortunately, I doubt that anything similar will happen this time.
Jan
Re: Yokohama Triennale
Date: 2008-09-28 07:52 am (UTC)Isn't that the nature of the Japanese press, though? They tend not to do criticism in the Western sense. I don't think you can blame that on the YT.
As for the grasshopper on the Continental Hotel, I thought it was the worst piece in the first Triennnale. It might as well have been part of some advertising campaign. Better populism, in 2001, was the use of a shopping centre as venue, and the huge photo of a clogged granny (http://imomus.com/dailyphoto040901.html) by (was it?) Miwa Yanagi.
This year, there were some things that would surely have intrigued the local populace: the Fujiko Nakaya artificial fog, for instance, or Terence Koh's crowd-walk to the sea.
But, frankly, I think trying to make contemporary art populist or locally-relevant would be a big mistake. I think it ought to be a sort of publicly-exhibited research, a sort of esoteric poetry, a rather austere beauty that you adapt to more than it adapts to you, a high church. Play to its weakness (elitism) and you'd get something like tabloid TV in an art context. Play to its strength and you get something no other medium can do. And yes, that does often mean slowness (Tsunoda and Luke Fowler's piece) and pretension (Saburo Teshigawara writhing around in broken glass) and difficulty and obscurity and obscenity (Hermann Nitsche) and spikiness (Cameron Jamie) and taboo (Marina Abramovic with her instructions on nude platform viewing).
There's plenty of room in commercial media for the glib and the flashy, we don't need them in art, and when art does them (Damien Hirst springs to mind) it's at its worst.