I've spoken before about my love for Tokyo-based architects Atelier Bow-wow. Yoshiharu Tsukamoto and Momoyo Kaijima have been working under that name (and its Japanese version, Atelier Wan-wan) since 1992. Whether they're making buildings, exhibitions or books (like 2001's influential "Pet Architecture"), their work keeps returning to certain themes and "keywords"; it's modest, dense, organic, somewhat haphazard, unfinished and lo-fi, made with cheap materials in unexpected corners. Here, for instance, is a lovely Atelier Bow-wow piece, made this year, a "mediapod":
The mediapod is not only a beautiful, slightly self-mocking visual corollary for the information-mania of the modern subject—I know this is pretty much how I live—it also looks like the dense book-filled rooms used for centuries by Japanese writers and illustrators, piled to the ceiling with books and scrolls, or the cluttered otaku-space Kyoichi Tsuzuki documents in his Tokyo Style book. Tsuzuki traces this back to the hermetic tradition of asceticism spelled out in 13th century classic Hojoki, "the ten foot-square hermitage". But if this is famine in terms of materials, it's feast in terms of information; the aesthetic is one that revels in clutter, and finds the look of raw storage, particularly cultural storage, a friendly and reassuring one.So it's entirely appropriate that Atelier Bow-wow were called in to style Japan's most exciting art fair, the Yokohama Triennale, which opened (a year later than scheduled) last month. I was at the first Yokohama Triennale, back in September 2001. The main thing I remember was being very impressed by John Bock's installation. The space itself, a series of white cubes in two warehouses, wasn't particularly memorable, though; the white cube is, after all, designed to be completely self-effacing, to let the art do the talking.
This time, though, as Daikanyama-based curator Roger McDonald says on his blog, "the ambience of the spaces is industrial, rough and exposed. I heard from one of the curators that pigeons nesting in the roof rafters remains an issue, and that the organisers had to clean away years of pigeon shit before beginning the exhibition installation". As pet-lovers, though, the Bow-wows have built the pigeons into the presentation rather than banishing them. And as photos on Roger's blog reveal, the metaphor this year has switched from the white cube to the packing case. Atelier Bow-wow (assisted by Workstation) have, says McDonald, "constructed an exhibition which remains very much 'under construction' and purposefully un-polished. No straight white walls have been built, and instead wooden containers have been placed at various angles within the large spaces to contain works. These containers remain un-painted, their structures exposed on the outside. There is an abundance of scaffolding around the exhibition too."


As someone who often walks past building sites thinking "It'll never look or smell as beautiful as that when it's finished", I appreciate this packing case idea a lot. (Atelier Bow-wow themselves call their aesthetic da-me or "no-good architecture".) One of the thrills of these big art shows is the sense of fresh ideas coming out of boxes, the idea of global trade itself, the international trade in embodied concepts. The raw chipboard and wood has a fresh, temporary smell which adds to the excitement of the art itself.
My first exposure to Atelier Bow-wow came in the 1999 exhibition Cities on the Move, which presented density, modesty and temporariness as specifically Asian virtues. Atelier Bow-wow have been developing these ideas since then — the Yokohama packing cases are direct descendents of the design of their contribution to the 2003 show at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, "How Latitude Becomes Form", where they contributed "Pet Architecture (Architecture for Temporary Autonomous Sarai)".
It makes sense that Atelier Bow-wow should turn two working dockside warehouses into places where visitors can feel the excitement of the fresh arrival of cultural goods. What are these vast sheds, in the end, but two huge mediapods you're welcome to come and root around in?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 10:33 am (UTC)Aah, they'd be fine.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 10:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 10:55 am (UTC)How hard could it be?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 11:04 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 11:14 am (UTC)They call their style "da-me architecture", or "no-good" or "failed" architecture, and draw inspiration from the eel houses of Tokyo, residential or commercial space jammed into tiny corners, with odd angles, spaces that, anywhere else in the world, would be inhabited by pigeons, spiders... and eels, presumably. (They're called "eel houses" because an eel can coil itself into any shape.)
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 11:24 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 11:26 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 11:59 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 12:02 pm (UTC)As being the art student I am plus this misserable design year over here(I recently got to know that next year is the multi-cultural year, but the design year got about 40 mil SEK while the next year will only get about 3-4 mil SEK as a budget) I accidently made a sort of "failed" piece of design, or architecture. The whole piece is..... It is..... Horrible! Sorry for no pictures, but it looks like a "wave" pretending to be a fallen chair of sort. Gosh!
And if there now is anti-design around, or well, "eel design". Who would buy it? Would it be missplaced all over? When do something become failed design in that case?
(Damn, perhaps offtopic, but what the heck).
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 12:02 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 12:37 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 12:47 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 12:49 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:00 pm (UTC)But I didn't say "But still, because of genetic reasons, the last years gig here(Sweden) was kind of dissappointing for you, right?" now did I?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:08 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:14 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:44 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 01:53 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 02:18 pm (UTC)But maybe all I'm really saying is that the Japanese are the English it's okay to like.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 02:32 pm (UTC)there was a show from bow wow - where they silkscreened the photographs from the pet architecture series on white t-shirts.
the mangapod stayed with us a few months - people could leave and take books, but most of the time it was filled with old art books and cheap novel paperbacks
It's beautiful!
Date: 2005-10-13 03:27 pm (UTC)these japanese architects are genius!
but it would be ruined if you put it in any apartment don't you think?
link to Bow wow video interview
Date: 2005-10-13 03:29 pm (UTC)Re: It's beautiful!
Date: 2005-10-13 03:31 pm (UTC)Re: link to Bow wow video interview
Date: 2005-10-13 03:35 pm (UTC)Re: It's beautiful!
Date: 2005-10-13 03:52 pm (UTC)now that's a job for me
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 04:52 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 04:58 pm (UTC)Wow! Great! Yay! I actually have had a little bit of a down period when I saw that you had played in Sweden last year.
And it happend 6 months before I got introduced to your music by a friend.
Talk about the opposite of luck, uhm...
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 05:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 05:45 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 06:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 07:02 pm (UTC)It may be "no good" architecture but it looks like pretty good engineering. I heard somewhere that the Japanese woodworker doesn't want his/her work to be perfect. That to strive for perfection is a sign of arrogance. That there should be flaws.
As a carpenter I use this on my clients when they start getting picky. It's the Japanese influence in my art!
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 07:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-13 07:34 pm (UTC)I'm going to put this on my buisness card:
All things are impermanent
All things are imperfect
All things are incomplete
"Fine cabinetry...but not too fine"
Re: link to Bow wow video interview
Date: 2005-10-13 10:08 pm (UTC)http://habw.exblog.jp/
what was your japanese translation gizmo again?
i actually just picked up "Pet Architecture" the other week,
it is fantastic. i love the radio station in it...
(no subject)
Date: 2005-10-18 01:49 pm (UTC)"Inspired by Kamono Chomei (1155-1216), who wrote the manuscript HOJOKI in his exile for solitude, I envisioned a Glass Teahouse. In HOJOKI, Kamono Chomei took along his hermitage, a tiny 3x3 meter space, where he wrote and slept and thought about the ever-changing world, contemplating nothingness as well as infinity.... Through a simple construction, I hope the Teahouse space as a contemporary hermitage or a mind spaceship could entertain visitors by encouraging their mind into realm of unlimited imagination."