Re-Collection Vol. 3

Takeo YAMAGUCHI
Words from the Collection

January 2 - June 29, 2014

Hours:
9:30-17:00 (last admission 16:30)
Closed:
Mondays (except Jan. 13, May 5), Jan. 14, May 7
Organizer:
DIC Corporation
Patrons:
Chiba Prefecture, Chiba Prefectural Board of Education, Sakura City, Sakura City Board of Education

Museum Admission

  • Adults ¥900
  • College / 65 and over ¥700
  • Elem / JH / HS ¥500

Groups of 20 or more:

  • Adults ¥800
  • College / 65 and over ¥600
  • Elem / JH / HS ¥400

Persons with a disability pass:

  • Adults ¥700
  • College / 65 and over ¥500
  • Elem / JH / HS ¥300

*Admission also includes entrance to the permanent collection galleries.
- For students and seniors over 65, discounts require identification such as a Student ID, passport or driver's license.
- For persons with a disability pass=the same discounted price applies for one accompanying care-giver for each disability pass holder

Outline

For the 3rd edition of the “Re-collection” series introducing the great diversity of the museum’s permanent collection, two exhibitions, “Takeo YAMAGUCHI” and “Words from the Collection” will be held concurrently.

In the exhibition “Takeo YAMAGUCHI,” the art of the important figure in the world of modern and contemporary Japanese painting, Takeo Yamaguchi (1902-83), will be presented from a number of perspectives with eight oil paintings, watercolors and works of painted ceramics. In “Words from the Collection,” the exhibition will be composed of four sections that explore the letters and words appearing in the works and episodes about the artists and the models they depicted. We hope that visitors will find new appreciation of the stories woven by the words from these works.

Words from the Collection

Words are an integral part of art museums, playing important their roles in exhibition leaflets, collection catalogs, gallery talks, headset audio guides and the captions beside the works on the gallery walls. Using words to connect the viewer to a work of art can be considered one of the primary roles of a museum. When we stand in front of works in the galleries, there are also times when our thoughts and feelings roam freely in realms beyond those of the words that the museum has given us and we want to communicate our experience to someone in spoken or written words. Doesn’t the museum offer a wonderful range of possibilities as a place where words are born of the encounter between the viewers and works of art? This exhibition focuses on letters, words and text in the works of the museum’s collection as keys that can open doors to a wealth of new images. We hope that visitors will find new enjoyment in the stories about works of art that are unlocked by the words found within them.

Takeo YAMAGUCHI

On display in gallery 202 during this exhibition are works of Takeo Yamaguchi (1902-83), a painter who left an exceptional artistic heritage in the modern and contemporary periods of Japanese art. Born in the city that is today Seoul, Rep. of Korea (with Japanese citizen registration in Kagoshima, Pref.), Yamaguchi graduated from the Tokyo Fine Arts School and then traveled to France to continue art activities with other Japanese painters such as Yuzo Saeki and Takanori Ogisu, after which he returned to Seoul to pursue his career as a painter. In this period Yamaguchi participated as a member of the avant-garde group Kyu-shitsu Kai within the Nika Kai (Nika Association). Returning to Japan after World War II, He developed an individual painting style employing mostly monochromatic use of black, reddish brown or ochre oil paint applied to the canvas with a unique method that won him recognition for artistic excellence in Japan and abroad. 

Although his works are abstract in nature, they were the product of extensive observation or contact with some figurative subject matter, resulted in a great depth of substance and appeal that differentiates them from Western abstract painting. This exhibition presents a selection of eight oil paintings and works in watercolor and painted ceramics ranging from early works of the 1930s to those of the artist’s mature period in the 1960s and’70s to provide a multi-faceted view of the art of Takeo Yamaguchi.

Events

Gallery Talk by the exhibition Curators

Jan. 11 (Sat.), Feb. 15 (Sat.), Mar. 21 (Fri., Holiday), Apr. 12 (Sat.), May 18 (Sun.), Jun. 14 (Sat.)
14:00-15:00
The curators in charge of each of the two exhibits will explain the contents. 
No reservations needed / Gather at Entrance Hall


Guided Tours

Daily 14:00-15:00 (except days of the Gallery Talks) 
Tours of the permanent collection and the exhibitions by guide staff. 
No reservations needed / Gather at Entrance Hall


Audio Guide (In Japanese)

Hear recorded explanations of the works
500 yen per headset


Museum Concert

Soothing sounds played on stone “Reiko Komatsu Sanukaito & Marimba Concert”
Mar.15 (Sat.) 18:00-
General Admission: ¥2,800, Members: ¥2,300
 

Niwanowa Arts & Crafts Fair, Chiba

May 31 (Sat.) and Jun.1 (Sun.) 10:00-16:00 
Outdoor market of craft works, etc., by artists who love Chiba. 
Crowded traffic conditions are expected, so please check access information prior to coming.
Organizer: Niwanowa Organizing Committee http://niwanowa.info/