Upcoming events: Feb, Mar
(1) Some students from my course at ArtScience are making presentations at the event.
14.02.2018 20:00- CET
https://www.mediamatic.net/en/page/369913/odorama-game-edition
(2) Textile Memories – The World of BORO
14.02.2018 20:00- CET
https://www.mediamatic.net/en/page/369913/odorama-game-edition
(2) Textile Memories – The World of BORO
opening: 02.03.2018 18:00-
Organization: ATSUKO BAROUH arts drinks talk
2018.03.03 Sat - 04.01 Sun
Sun&Mon 11:00~18:00
Wed-Sat 14:00~20:00
closed on Tue
This exhibition will feature parts of Gallery Kojima's collection of indigo dye BORO as well as works by cardboard sculptor Honno Genta and MAKI UEDA, who experiments with fusing scents and visual art. Come and take home with you some new stimuli for your eyes, nose and hands!
entrance fee:¥500
http://l-amusee.com/atsukobarouh/schedule/2018/0303_4583.phpSun&Mon 11:00~18:00
Wed-Sat 14:00~20:00
closed on Tue
There was a time when textiles were precious goods. Actually, a time not so long ago. Yarns were spun and woven together by hand. And yet not everyone could get his hands on bigger pieces of fabric. So one had to make due with what one got and sew together fabric scraps to make clothes to wear or futons to sleep on. That's what you find in the BORO collection: textiles that were handed from one generation to the next, with seams having been mended here and holes having been patched with fabric scraps there. You will be surprised by how vibrant, how full of life these textiles are. As were designers at Louis Vuitton, COMME des GARÇONS and KAPTIAL, who all were inspired by BORO.
Not art works but not fashion either, these textiles, as they now exist in front of us, were born out of necessity. As was their design. That is what makes them so convincing, so real. They give us access to an idea of beauty and aesthetic pleasures different from textiles produced for the aristocracy or the wealthy.
In times such as ours, were money is spent on the redevelopment of Tokyo before pompous Olympic Games instead of earthquake victims, where the country's leaders cheerfully buy weapons of mass destruction, we might take a look back at our roots. Wasn't it textiles like these, that our grandmothers and great-grandmothers, 50, 60 years ago, there in the dark, silently sewed, mended, patched after we went to bed? Where is Japan heading? Is our way of life right the way it is? That's what we should ask these textiles.
Atsuko Barouh, December 2017
This exhibition will feature parts of Gallery Kojima's collection of indigo dye BORO as well as works by cardboard sculptor Honno Genta and MAKI UEDA, who experiments with fusing scents and visual art. Come and take home with you some new stimuli for your eyes, nose and hands!
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