10.12.10

The Little Garden of Jun Shirasu AB1 Gallery Macau





"The Little Garden of Jun Shirasu" opened on 20th November, 2010 at ART BASE GALLERY, MACAU.

Special thanks to Ada Mok, James Wong and all AB1 staffs.


















  The Little Garden of Jun Shirasu



20 November 2010 - 20 February 2011




ART BASE 1


Avenida do Almirante Lacerda, No.14 -14C, Edf. Ind.
Iao Son, 5 andar, Macau


Tel.       +853 8988 9235   
Fax.         +853 2825 8824
URL.       http://www.artbase1.org.mo/
e-mail.    artbase@penhacc.com


Opening hour  Mon-Sun  10:00-20:00




Featured;  "Language in the Dawn 2010  Macao version"  with 500LED flashing in motion Mandarin text
Prints: 70pcs

Tiles: 12pcs
Paintings: 5pcs (Tile's drafts)
Stone etchings: 143pcs




"The Little Garden of Jun Shirasu", Art Base 1 Gallery, Macau, reflects prints, drawings, tile panels and stone etchings produced from 1989 to 2010 by the artist.

This fascinating event pinpoints the overall achievement of the renowned Japanese artist, Jun Shirasu, accumulated over the twenty years of his artistic career. This show consists approximately 200 pieces of artworks created in either Europe or Japan, including marble-etching works, hand-painted ceramic tiles, and printmaking art in varied mediums.

As a peripatetic artist, Jun has attained his further education at the Slade School of Fine Art in England, and his first teaching experience at the Czech Republic. The art of gardening has always been the major inspiration of Jun's work: His art is indeed, a romantic representation of a cultural clash formulated by the Eastern and Western idealization of nature. This theme is also evident in his recent co-operative projects of large-scale ceramic murals in different cities such as Lisbon, Tokyo and Macao. As the largest local art exhibition by far, a huge multimedia installation-12 meters in length, would be displayed. Art enthusiasts, do not miss out!




 
 
Visit more works on SHIRASSTUDIO HP.
           
 




                     MAP


6.10.10









           
 Oceans in between


 Arrabida  and  Nagasaki






 It was a sunny, bright morning. A view was a bay, a large cargo anchored, fishing boat heading to a market place, people taking walks at the warf, palm tree arranged in the same distance. It reminded me Setubal, if the charcoal smoked and fishermen opened bottles of "Sagres" under the morning sunshine. 
 Prints already arrived at the museum, the show space used to be an audio room and refurbished to the exhibition space. It turned to a dark room, like a theatre, hanging black curtains and lining black wall papers. The exhibition title is "Portugal Arte e Poesia in Nagasaki." I choosed some works related with Nagasaki. Key word is "sunset in the ocean."

 "Ocean in silence" is a photo etching print, made in 2002, and sticking photographs, in chine-collee, from  the Convent of Arrabiba. I visited the convent in 02, by chance. It was a breathtaking space. It stands on the cliff of Arrabida mountains, remote of Setubal, mouth of Troia peninsula. There was gardens. Pavement leads to block of compartment. Room has a quite few headroom and a window view, angle facing to the Atlantic Ocean. Fountain of Jesus statue decorated with shells, as well as the nitch which was covered with enormous numbers of shells too. Inside of chapel completely shaded sun light. It was too dark to see even tryptich, icons, any statues of Saints. In an another quater, I saw a statue of Maria. It was placed behind the bars, laying on the rock and stroking a skull of Jesus. The space was also too dark to take pictures.
 Everything seemed to be arranged for meditation. Rest of the time, priests worked making rounded roof tiles, that clay was moulded by their legs.
 It is said the convent was built in 13th century. The first encounter with westers for Japan was in 1543, when Portuguese arrived with gun and Jesuit. After a decade, they allowed to anchor in Nagasaki. So there is no wonder if some of them past from the convent of Arrabida to Nagasaki. The view from the small compartment in Arrabida lept my mind to the ports of Orient. It is an enormous distance and time between, and it used to be too. Now they seem to be linked, through  my relatively short transition of journeys, view from experieces and studies of history, however, the objects are too huge, beyond my imagination. 
 
"Eight botanic scenes IV - celestial," (2007) places two Chinese banners at both side of image. The writing is quoted from "The Dunhuang star atlas," the oldest existing manuscript written on paper of Chinese constellations, possibly dated 649-684 (early Tang dynasty). In addition, I put my own poem in Chinese on top of the winter melon flower, and depicting about the view from my small studio in a rainy day, in a dream floating over and reaching to the Atlantic ocean as,

In an An ( a shanty, a shed or a hiding place) of Megurita (name of my studio locates),

There is a jardinha (small garden) in front of my sight
Listen a sound of a rain dripping - for a while
Leap the mind to my Master who lives in the far of the western sea

I dream when inclining a glass of wine
The rain reaches to the water in the Atlantic Ocean
The galaxy circles over her sky

My command of Chinese is rather advisable to be brushed, however I thought the drip of water arrives to the sea near Nagasaki first. It is seemingly reasonable.


"Man at the stairs"(1996), the image was inspired by a human silhouette, burnt by an atomic flash traced only its shadow on a stone stair of a bank entrance of Hiroshima, 1945. The burnt shadow and the stair stones were collected by Hiroshima peace memorial museum. For the image, please visit
http://www.pcf.city.hiroshima.jp/virtual/VirtualMuseum_j/visit/subcon/sa141-2.html

This print was produced after the visit of museum. The latest research, in 1996, tells that the shadow was from Mitsuno Ochi, a woman, forty two years old, who waited for opening the bank and sitting at the stair. Atomic brust vapored her body in a second but her silhouette.


Visit more works on SHIRASSTUDIO HP.

11.9.10

Solo Exhibition in Macao

                                                             Solo exhibition at AB1 Gallery in Macao

 A sudden offer by Macao AB1 Gallery, to open sole exhibition in November took me a short trip to see the space at the end of July. James Wong, artist, master printmaker in Macao and  a supervisor of the show, took me the gallery. The space was huge for a sole show, more than 500 sq/m. Wall of the gallery extends about 130m long, which is long enough to exhibit selected works of my past twenty years, including some tile panels.
 James suggested to show my print installation "Language in the Dawn,"  scroll print curtain wall by collagraph. This work and the project were initially shown in Art Studio Itsukaichi in 1994, Bumpodo gallery, Tokyo and Diferenca, Lisbon in 2002. This time in AB1 gallery the scroll will extends to 4x11 metres, installing with LED lights circuits behind the scrolls and lights illuminate by the alphabetical order on the computer keyboard, so it's vertical, and send message to audience. This is the revised edition of 2002 in Bumpodo, Tokyo. 

(This blog was originally posted on 28th July at SHIRAS STUDIO Local ver.)



Visit more works on SHIRASSTUDIO HP.





PORTUGAL  Arte e Poesia  em Nagasaki 


 Typhoon was approaching in Nagasaki on 6th, covered the sky grey with thick twirlig clouds. It was my first visit Kyushu. The colour of the city seemed to symbolize her past and history.  
 After checking in hotel, I went to the Art Museum of Nagasaki, where I met Shoji Yasuda, president of Japan Portugal Association in Nagasaki, as well as the organizer of the following exhibition "Arte e Poesia em Nagasaki." The show will open from 2nd to 14th October. It is an extending tour exhibition by Arte e Poesie at GYRE in Omotesando in May. This is one of the commemorating events for the 150 anniversary of modern diplomacy between Portual and Japan in 2010.
 During our two days meetings, I fixed schedules of tile workshop, opening on 1st October,  and also the shipping arrangement of my prints and tiles.

 The museum was designed by Kengo Kuma, one of the most leading architects in Japan. The structure bridges over a canal, and the view reaches down to the port of Nagasaki. 
 As it locates at the head of the wharf, down from Dejima quarter in a minute walk, seemingly it navigates to the frontier of the new perspective of art.

 In the afternoon of the next day, the typhoon past to the north, and my first sort of tourist site was a commemoration of the Martyrdom of the Twenty Six Saints. It locates at Nishizaka park, near Nagasaki Railway station. A large panel, mounted the bronze statues of Saints, including twenty Japanese christians wth two children crucified in 1597, was built in 1962. Bronze sculptures were made by Yasutake Hunakoshi in the same year. 
 For its historical background, visit a related web-site like;

 I took a photograph of the sky, which each Saint looks up, and lept a mind to the sky of the day, of  their last day's. The scene also reminded me a book cover of,  my version of, "Chin-moku - The silence" written by Shusaku Endo in 1966. It was also a photo of the dark sky.

 Nagasaki citizen doesn't take a bicycle for commuting either transporting method. Because the city locates on steep hills. After all it doesn't annoy walkers, very often it scares pedestrians that bikes ring at our backs. Enjoy walking on streets in Nagasaki. It was great.
 
 
 
Visit more works on SHIRASSTUDIO HP.