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利用者:Mananbojieke/Yanagi yukinori

Yukinori Yanagi (born 2 May, 1959) is a Japanese contemporary artist.

Yukinori Yanagi
生誕 (1959-05-02) 1959年5月2日
Fukuoka, Japan.
教育 Yale University
代表作 The World Flag Ant Farm, Inujima Seirensho Art Museum
受賞 the Aperto Award at the 45th Venice Biennale
公式サイト http://www.yanagistudio.net/
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From 1986, Yanagi began to exhibit artwork such as those using ants and soil balls that represent dung beetle rolled balls, addressing the issues of “movement” from the perspective of an outsider of the art world’s system. Yanagi had an opportunity to exhibit works at the Hillside Gallery in Daikanyama, where he showed various pieces including a smoke performance piece I Feel Yellow.[1] Yanagi was awarded the Excellence Award in Art Document from the Tochigi Prefectural Art Museum of Fine Arts in 1987. [2]  

Yanagi moved to America after he received a scholarship from the Sculpture Department of the Graduate School of Yale University School of Art and Architecture in 1988, where he studied under Vito Acconci, Frank Gehry, among others. [3]

The World Flag Ant Farm was awarded the Aperto Award at the 45th Venice Biennale in 1993. [4] He created an art project on Alcatraz Island, San Francisco Bay’s former prison island, in 1996. [5]

In 1992, he was invited to open a solo exhibition at the Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum (now Benesse House at Benesse Art Site Naoshima), which had only newly opened in 1992. His stay on Naoshima inspired an idea for a new work on an island in the Seto Inland Sea. [6] [7]

In 1995, Yanagi’s vision for the revitalization of the whole island of Inujima by turning the copper refinery ruins into art and using renewable energy, was realized with the support from Benesse Corporation’s CEO at the time, Soichiro Fukutake. In 2008, Inujima Art Project’s “Seirensho”, which combines features of the house of Yukio Mishima and Heritage Industrial Modernization, opened and is now known as Inujima Seirensho Art Museum. [8][9][10]

In 2000, Yanagi became the first foreign artist living in New York to be invited to exhibit at the Whitney Biennial, alongside Cai Guo-Qiang. Yanagi presented his “Study For American Art” series, which included his Three Flags, Jasper Jones inspired piece. [11]  

The Inujima Art House Project during the 1st Art Setouchi in 2010, featured three installations in the Inujima village, by Yanagi in collaboration with architect Kazuyo Sejima.[12] After the completion of the Inujima Project, he took on the challenge of transforming an old junior high school on the remote island of Momoshima Island, Onomichi City, Hiroshima prefecture, to make ART BASE MOMOSHIMA, and work in the Onomichi Channel area. [13]

In 2016, Yanagi’s large-scale solo exhibition at Yokohama’s BankART1929 explored the 30 years of his artwork and took up the whole museum. He unveiled Project God-zilla, a work about the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant. [14][4]

  1. ^ YANAGI LIVE. Tokyo, Japan: Hillside Gallery. (1987). pp. 28 
  2. ^ Art Document ’87 Installation + Video + Performance. Tochigi, Japan: Tochigi Prefectural Museum of Fine Arts. (1987) 
  3. ^ Inujima Note. Tokyo, Japan: Miyake Fine Art. (2010). pp. 102. ISBN 978-4990384722 
  4. ^ a b Art in America, January 2017. New York: ART MEDIA AIA, LLC, USA. (2017). pp. 93 
  5. ^ Field Work on Alcatraz. San Francisco: Capp Street Project. (1996). pp. 24 
  6. ^ Wandering Position Yukinori Yanagi. Okayama, Japan: Fukutake Publishing Co., Ltd. (1992). pp. 5 
  7. ^ Inujima Note. Tokyo, Japan: Miyake Fine Arts. (2010). pp. 106. ISBN 978-4990384722 
  8. ^ Inujima Seirensho Art Museum Handbook. Okayama, Japan: Fukutake Foundation. (2017) 
  9. ^ Inujima Note. Tokyo, Japan: Miyake Fine Art. (2010). ISBN 978-4990384722 
  10. ^ Insular Insight: Where Art and Architecture Conspire with Nature : Naoshima, Teshima, Inujima. Lars Muller Publisher & Fukutake Foundation. (2011). pp. 135. ISBN 9783037782552 
  11. ^ Whitney Biennial 2000 Biennial Exhibition. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art. (2000). pp. 221. ISBN 978-0810968295 
  12. ^ Inujima Note. Tokyo, Japan: Miyake Fine Art. (2010). pp. 41. ISBN 978-4990384722 
  13. ^ ART BASE MOMOSHIMA. Hiroshima, Japan: Hiroshima Art Project. (2014) 
  14. ^ Yukinori Yanagi Wandering Position. Yokohama, Japan: BankART1929. (2016). ISBN 978-4902736427