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East of Eden: Gardens in Asian Art
February 24, 2007|May 13, 2007
Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
Freer Gallery of Art / Arthur M. Sackler Gallery
Smithsonian Institution
P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707
Washington, D.C. 20013-7012
202.633.4880
202.357.4911 (fax)
http://www.asia.si.edu/
Subtly combining a traditional format with contemporary
media, Flowering Plants of the Four Seasons (Spring, Summer,
and Autumn) depicts the transformation of a landscape over
time. With a seventeenth-century screen painting by Kano
Tan'yu (1602-1674) commissioned for Ninomaru Palace in Kyoto
as her reference point, Mami Kosemura arranged flowers and
plants in her studio and digitally photographed them for
several months. She then assembled those photographs in
a collage to create a painting in which peonies and morning
glories bloom and wither, while Japanese pampas grasses
sway in gentle breezes. As branches grow verdant and bend
with the weight of the passing seasons, the sounds of birdsong
and rustling leaves further accentuate the experience of
nature and its inevitable cycle of birth and decay. Winter,
with its lack of vegetation, is represented in a separate
work not shown here.
Scenes of idealized landscapes in different seasons are
a common motif in traditional Japanese screen painting.
Moving across the panels of a screen from right to left,
the viewer typically would be drawn through successive scenes
depicting each of the four seasons. By reinterpreting the
formal composition of Tan'yu's work with moving image and
sound, Kosemura is able to condense time and present in
a single scene three of the seasons. Much like Tan'yu's
screen painting, Kosemura conceived her work in the format
of a fusuma, or pairs of sliding doors in a wooden frame.
Trained in oil and mural painting, Kosemura uses digital
photography and video to explore the relationship between
the "natural" appearance of objects in still life
painting and the moving image, which can record the uncontrollable
effects of change.
East of Eden: Gardens in Asian Art has received generous
support from the Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group and Mr.
and Mrs. Farhad F. Ebrahimi.
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article for Asiatica
My work "Flowering Plants of the Four Seasons"was
introduced on "ASIATICA" it is a newspaper that
Freer Gallery of Art & Arthur M. Sackler Gallery issue.
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Animation - Adventures of "Moving Picture"
2007/3/3, 4, 10
Lecture hall / Yokohama Museum of Art
admission feeF
a ticket for all program 1,900
a ticket for one program 500
3/3@
13:30~@a "Drawing"
15:30~@b "Shifting"@
17:30~@c "Collage"
3/4@
13:30~@d "Abstraction"@
15:30~@e "Solo-Exhibition"@
17:00~@"Talk-Event"
3/10@
13:30~@f " Fantasy"@
15:30~@g "Body"
–My work "Sweet Scent" will be screened at g-program
"Body".
Yokohama Museum of Art
3-4-1, MINATOMIRAI
NISHI-KU, YOKOHAMA 220-0012 JAPAN
tel : +81-45-221-0300i‘ãj
fax : +81-45-221-0145
close : Thursday
http://www.yaf.or.jp/yma/
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