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Miwa YANAGI: Lullaby
Events
Written by KALONSNET Editor   
Published: February 16 2010

A drawing for "Lullaby", courtesy of the artist and RAT HOLE GALLERY copy right(c) Miwa YANAGI

2009 was a greatly meaningful year for the artist, Miwa Yanagi. Starting with the solo exhibition My Grandmothers in Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography in March, she presented a total of three solo exhibitions in 2009. In June, she presented her new works Windswept Women at the Japanese Pavilion in the 53rd Venice Biennale and in the same month presented Po-po Niang-niang! at the National Museum of Art, Osaka. Windswept Women highlighted how the dramatic impression, which had been contained in Yanagi’s photographic works could be physically realized in an installation. She covered the whole Japanese Pavilion with a huge tent and inside placed a small half-broken tent with a child-size entrance, for her video art works The Old Girl’s Troupe. Synchronized with those two tents, giant framed portraits confused viewers’ sense of scale. Lullaby, Yanagi’s brand-new video art work is to be released at the Rat Hole Gallery. In this work, appear women in two different generations – very old and very young, this is the return of a motif the artist has previously explored. In a closed room, an old lady and a young girl tangle each other in a state between conflict and assimilation, and as the process goes on, the closed room changes its form and breaks down. This work, having not a little to do with the artist’s Windswept Women, clearly shows dramatic confrontation of two bodies and the insignificance of house and family connections. These two women are not representatives of each generation but ambivalent entities, which are to shake our fixed concepts of values toward women. In many of Yanagi’s video art works including Kagome, Kagome (1998), Granddaughters (2002), Suna Shojyo (2004), Suna Onna (2005), Fortune Telling (2005), and The Old Girl’s Troupe (2009), reality and imagination mix and it seems ordained that the tales will unrelentingly continue although the stories have beginnings and endings. Like the real world has no ending, women in Yanagi’s works, which can be alter egos for viewers, never have their endings and have strength to bear repetitions of their everyday small creation and destruction. * The text provided by RAT HOLE GALLERY.

Last Updated on January 29 2010
 

Editor's Note by Tomohiro MASUDA


I have heard from a certain mother who has the child that she envies her daughter". She cannot permit the daughter's existence that praises the youth that she is losing. The daughter is grumbling at her mother that “the closing time is too severe, and she attempts to bind me in the bed". It exactly recalls the episode of "Snow White". Here, Miwa Yanagi has a seemingly grandmother and granddaughter fight instead of a mother and daughter. In the poor-grapple like a third-rate professional wrestling performance, both of the old woman's mask and the calves of the woman with a daughter's mask are sexually mature enough and seem hideous. Which wins at the end of love and hate? Is it really happy to win? Doesn’t the deep attachment useless? Please see the end of the mud game in the exhibition place.


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