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Jiro Takamatsu

Jirō Takamatsu was one of the most important postwar Japanese artists. Takamatsu used photography, sculpture, painting, drawing, and performance to fundamentally investigate the philosophical and material conditions of art. Takamatsu's practice was dedicated to the critique of cognition and perception, through the rendering and variation of morphological devices, such as shadow, tautology, appropriation, perceptual and perspective distortion and representation. Takamatsu's conceptual work can be understood through his notions of the Zero Dimension, which renders an object or form to observe its fundamental geometrical components. Takamatsu isolated these smallest constituent elements, asserting that these elements produce reality, or existence. For Takamatsu the elementary particle represents “the ultimate of division” and also “emptiness itself,” like the a line within a painting—there appears to be nothing more beyond the line itself. Yet, Takamatsu's end goal was not to just prove the presence or object-ness of these elements, but rather to use them as a way to challenge and prove the limits of human perception, leading to his fixation on “absence” or the things that are unobservable.

Biography
Early life and education Takamatsu was born in Tokyo in 1936. From 1954 to 1958 he attended Tokyo University of the Arts, where he majored in oil painting and was a classmate of his future Hi-Red Center member Natsuyuki Nakanishi. As part of his coursework, Takamatsu studied the beginnings of pictorial modernities spanning Sesshū Tōyō to Paul Cézanne (as noted in his writings). Duncan Wooldridge has argued that Takamtsu's interest in both modern Western and Japanese art histories allows us to understand his work as a crucial meeting point between culturally coded conventions, as well as his later success as a Japanese artist at the forefront of the movement towards international contemporaneity. Yomiuri Indépendant Exhibition (1958-1963) After graduation, Takamatsu began showing paintings at the raucous and unjuried Yomiuri Indépendant Exhibition. Takamatsu formed his network of anti-establishment artists at the Yomiuri Indépendant, which became a site of exploration and experimentation for many avant-garde-minded younger artists, especially from 1958 onward. From 1958 to 1961, Takamatsu submitted works to the painting section, but he re-conceived his practice as sculptural from 1961 to 1963. Takamatsu has attributed this shift to "sculptural" to the Point series of works he submitted in 1961, This evolved into the series String: Black, which Takamatsu showed at the 14th Yomiuri Indépendant in 1962, and which marked the beginning of a long series of artworks making use of string as an eminently portable medium which could be used to infiltrate and cordon off artistic space even beyond and outside the art gallery itself. Yamanote Line Incident (1962) On October 18, 1962, Takamatsu along with future Hi-Red Center collaborator Natsuyuki Nakanishi and others, carried out an artistic happening they titled the "Yamanote Line Incident" (山手線事件, Yamanote-sen jiken), in which they boarded a Yamanote loop line train heading counter-clockwise on its route, disrupting the normalcy of passenger's commutes with a series of bizarre performative actions. Takamatsu served as the main photographer documenting the event. On the Fluxus-produced map of Hi-Red Center's activities, compiled and edited with the help of Shigeko Kubota, the Yamanote Line Incident is listed as number three. This is despite the fact that the Yamanote Line Incident is now considered to belong more properly to the pre-history of Hi-Red Center. The work is printed as such: “18 Oct. Event on Yamate loop line street car. • A continuous black string with various everyday objects attached to it at intervals was laid out on street from moving street car along its circular route. • Compact objects were hung from hand straps inside street car and observed by performers at close range with battery lights. • Faces of performers were painted white. • Performers read newspapers with holes burned in them.” According to Akasegawa, Nakanishi and Takamatsu used the Yamanote Line as a site for their event in order to "destroy the hierarchical status of art by bringing it into the ‘space of daily activities.’” Hi-Red Center (1963-1964) In 1963, Takamatsu co-founded the art collective Hi-Red Center along with Natsuyuki Nakanishi and Genpei Akasegawa. This brief-lived but influential group executed a variety of performance art events that sought to eliminate the boundaries between daily life and art. The group's name was formed from the first kanji characters of the three artists' surnames: "high" (the "Taka" in Takamatsu), "red" (the "Aka" in Akasegawa), and "center" (the "Naka" in Nakanishi). The foundation for Hi-Red Center might be located in the roundtable discussion, sponsored by the art magazine Keishō in November 1962, on the relationship between art and political action (as reflected the recent Yamanote Line Incident happening) titled Signs of Discourse on Direct Action, in which all three members had participated. All three artists had begun as painters but had turned to methods of “direct action” through Hi-Red Center, a term taken from prewar socialist agitators. Although the group's inaugural exhibition, Fifth Mixer Plan (Dai goji mikisā keikaku, May 1963), featured artworks the three artists had created independently, such as Takamatsu's busy entanglements of strings, Akasegawa's objects wrapped in printed 1000-yen notes, and Nakanishi's Konpakuto obuje ("Compact Objets"), egg-shaped translucent resign sculptures that embalmed everyday items, the emphasis on collaborative "direct action" came to the fore in the group's later activities, which featured a variety of "events," "plans," and "happenings." For example in Dropping Event (October 10, 1964), the group heaved various objects from the roof of Ikenobo Kaikan hall. After dropping the objects they collected and packed them all into a suitcase, placing it in a public locker and sending the key to the locker to someone chosen at random from a phone book. Participants included Yoko Ono and Nam June Paik, and were photographed from six sides to create a quasi-medical document ostensibly meant for the outfitting of personal fallout shelters. The events and happenings were subjected to documentation by both collaborators and strangers; Takamatsu in particular hoped that outsider [gaibusha] who had no knowledge of their existence or intention would document these events, in order to confirm the multiplicity (fukusūsei) or externalization (kyakutaika) of their works. This series of works recalls Plato's "Allegory of the Cave" as well as Pliny the Elder's account of the origins of painting, in which the daughter of the famed Greek potter Dibutades creates the first painting by tracing the silhouette of her lover. Takamatsu's artworks were also used for book covers of Japanese authors, such as Hajime Shinoda and Yuko Tsushima. From Space to Environment (1966) In November 1966, Takamatsu participated in From Space to Environment, a landmark two-part exhibition and event program in Tokyo that greatly influenced architecture, design, visual art, and music in Japan. Namely, the Environment Society (Enbairamento no Kai] (which held the event) put forth the notion of kanyko geijutsu [environment art], which considered the chaotic site as a locus for artists and viewers to consider the limitations of medium conventions and institutional spaces—which naturally related to Takamatsu's practice. While kankyo referred specifically to the location of such artistic activity, the practices of the 38 participating artists reflected a vested interested in intermedia art, envisage and enacted in the spatial dimensions of kankyo. Many of these artists, including Takamatsu, would go on to participate in Expo '70, conflating the terms intermedia, kankyo and technology in art discourse. Takamatsu's entry to this exhibition was Chairs and the Table in Perspective (1966), a sculpture-installation work from his Perspective series. He would later continue presenting works from this series at Venice Biennale and Expo '70. Chairs and the Table in Perspectively perspectivally distorted a dining set rendered with a grid-line veneer, the slanted base of the installation demonstrating linear perspective for the viewer. However, manifesting perspective meant the chair and tables were effectively unusable. Tōno Yoshiaki suggested that Takamatsu's work assaulted the normative human perception of single-point perspective as well as the assumption that everyday objects should always look the same. Tama Art University (1968-1972) and Mono-ha Between 1968 and 1972, Takamatsu taught at Tama Art University, Tokyo, and was a key figure in the development of the Mono-ha movement. Takamatsu's deep knowledge of topological geometry and principles of absence/emptiness were particularly influential on his students, such as Nobuo Sekine and other Mono-ha artists. However, one of the key differences that distinguishes Takamatsu's practice from Mono-ha is the presence, or direct influence, of an artists' creative subjectivity in the final form of the work. While many Mono-ha artists like Lee Ufan centered the objecthood of things as they were through his principle renunciation of his artistic subjectivity, Takamatsu's work featured objects that were clearly manipulated with through meticulous plans. During Takamatsu's tenure at Tama Art University, there were resurgences of student protests over the impending renewal of the Anpo US-Japan security treaty in 1970. Artists in Japan were critical of the Japanese establishment for their handling of the student protests and the unrest caused some art schools to become closed temporarily and in some cases, permanently. During partial closures, Takamatsu would review student's work and hold free classes outside the university. Interestingly enough, Takamatsu would go on to show at many international exhibitions that were situated within similar anti-government protests, both at the Venice Biennale and Expo '70. At the Venice Biennale in 1968, Takamatsu became friendly with artist and printmaker, Hitoshi Nakazato, who joined him as teacher at Tama Art University in 1968. Venice Biennale (1968) Takamatsu was included in the Japanese Pavilion for the 33rd Venice Biennale (1968) by art critic Hariu Ichirō, alongside Miki Tomio, Sugai Kumi, and Yamaguchi Katsuhiro. Takamatsu was awarded the Carlo Cardazzo Prize, which was an award intended for an outstanding Italian or foreign artist (only for the 34th Venice Biennale). Hariu was a proponent that Japan's pavilion should be conceived as providing a platform for “international contemporaneity” [kokusaiteki dōjisei], where Japanese artists could appear in dialogue with their peers overseas. Hariu did not envisage this as mere assimilation, but rather recognised that the difference of Japanese experimental practices would have to be pronounced. His vision was consistent with the leading art critics in the 1960s, Sano Takahiko noting that the Biennale was shifting to prioritising experimental practices, and should be seen as a form of cultural diplomacy. Their commentaries led to the International Art Association supporting and restructuring the planning for the Japanese pavilion, namely allowing commissioners to serve two consecutive terms. This was intended to enable continuity across editions, as well as allowing for additional lead time in preparing the latter pavilion. The first three commissioners selected in this period (1968–78) were the progressive critics Hariu Ichirō, Tōno Yoshiaki, and Nakahara Yūsuke, also known in Japan as the “Big Three” [go-sanke]. Takamatsu presented a work from his Perspective series that was similar to Chairs and the Table in Perspective, though in this installation he used curvilinear lines instead of orthogonals to manifest a perspective, with reciprocal curved triangular sections on the floor and the ceiling. The ceiling pieces appeared to grow out from the horizon (situated near the corner of the exhibition walls), curving upwards towards the ceiling. The floor sections resembled his previous work, with distorted or canted Chairs and Tables, while the ceiling sections were embellished with dots of varying sizes. Compared to Chairs and the Table in Perspective, this installation was more aesthetically playful, with the ceiling pieces emphasising a fuller distortion of space. Despite the call to boycott the Biennale due to student protests in Italy, the artists represented at the Japan pavilion decided collectively to move forward with the Biennale as they believed their actions would not contribute in a meaningful way to the Italian students plight. They collectively echoed Hariu's ambition to elevate Japanese presence on the international art stage. Similar to his Slack and earlier Perspective works, Takamatsu envisioned Sunday Plaza as a curvilinear forced perspective marked with curved grid lines, yet distinct as visitors were supposed to be able to traverse from the foreground into the viewing area of raised background. The inverse perspective background was to be an inclined structure that visitors could use as a viewing vantage point. It was to be made of glass, as compared to the concrete on the floor grids, reflecting the sky and hence further complicating this perspective. Alternate grids in the receding perspective area would be raised to be seats for visitors (which was eventually actualised, unlike the rest of his designed features). Notably, Takamatsu had planned to install Sunday Plaza in a location that was situated near existing hills, with the inclined background at the highest point, in order to pronounced the distorted and inverse perspective lines. Unfortunately, Takamatsu's plans were not fully executed, with another large installation positioned right behind Sunday Plaza and compressing the optical effects of this Perspective piece. The eventual inclined background was not walkable, though it still reflected the sky. Tokyo Biennale '70—Between Man and Matter (1970) Curated by the art critic Yusuke Nakahara, Tokyo Biennale '70 established the foundations of contemporary Japanese art by emphasising the importance of concepts (gainen), processes and systems in international art practices. The exhibition traveled from Tokyo, to other cities such as Nagoya, Kyoto, and Fukuoka. Nakahara produced two catalogues for the exhibition (the first with Nakahira Takuma's cover photo and the second documentary volume with a black cover). The first catalogue includes the participating artists own contributions of their biography and tentative work plans. Takamatsu chose to show installations from his Oneness series, and included the development of his varied series in his list of activities and exhibitions. He wrote the following text, which succinctly describes the philosophical tenets of his practice. "It seems that there is always great uncertainty in our being concerned only with particular (partial) elements of s matter. I think therefore it is necessary to have more total relation to a matter within the range of our own capacity. Some times such relation arises merely from our being aware of s matter and hardly with any effort but for most occasions some action is required. To me this action is artistic creation. A huge problem here is how to reject and eliminate ss much ss possible what compells us to be related merely to particular elements, for example, feelings and ideas in general, imaginations, memories, conventions, and the knowledge which we have already acquired. The solution of this problem always requires that fats/ compromise which is inevitable in any process of actualization, which however tends towards impossibility. Because it is impossible to have a perfectly total relation to a matter. Nevertheless it seems to me that all the problems do not exist in the sphere far from our familiar world, but most problems should be found in the world which is even too familiar to us." Takamatsu decided to show Oneness (16 Oneness) (1970) and Oneness (30 Oneness) (1970), the former consisting of partially carved Japanese cedar trunks, and the later being made out of paper. Takamatsu had originally envisaged the Oneness (16 Oneness) installation as a 3x3 grid (9 Oneness), but adapted the installation to fit the dimensions of the gallery space he was allocated. Takamatsu insisted upon carving the cedar blocks in the space itself, after they were placed within their 4x4 grid formation. Takamatsu deliberately chipped away at these blocks with varied levels of resultant exposure, producing a range of how much each block was carved out. Documenta 6 (1977) Takamatsu's chosen work for Documenta 6 in 1977 was one of his last sculptural works. Originally conceived as a combination of works installed both inside a gallery and outdoors, Takamatsu had to adapt his plan when the exhibition planners included more artists who only had works suitable for indoor showing. ==Work==
Work
Emptiness or absence for Takamatsu meant 100 percent potentiality (future), an evocation of a perfect reality without worlding or imaging it. Thus, Takamatsu's practice questions the act of seeing, consistent in his collaborations with Hi-Red Center and the Mono-ha artists. Furthermore, Takamatsu explored the differences between facts and experiences of perception, or how (visual) information is received versus how it is processed into meaning. Adrian Ogas notes that Takamatsu may have had a vision that the “points” represented as a cluster of accumulated lines of cells that are creating existence, self-propagating to build a life form as yet unseen. It [string] is the non-material, abstract, conceptual object that is length (can also be thought of as line,or point extended), Takamatsu started from the concept of a line in Euclidean geometry as “breadth-less length,” in other words, a line according to metaphysics. One of the most noted editions is no. 1125, featuring the iconographically infamous Coca-cola bottle; yet the appearance and branding of the bottle was insignificant to Takamatsu in relation to his conception of string. In some editions, such as with no. 1133, Takamatsu used two strings, again illustrating that the form of the string was not of priority to him. Beyond the abstracted length exemplified by string, Takamatsu also used to series to worlds—prompting things enter into unexpected associations by attaching everyday objects to his ropes and cords. These paintings, ranging in scale, figure, complexity and light source, show an object that is both present and absent, traced and imagined. These are shadows of people and objects long since departed, prompting viewers to consider the anti-reality or existence beyond the third dimension. The space created in the Perspective series using reverse perspective effects was a three-dimensional variation of that in the "Shadow" series. Takamatsu models worlds that are discomforting, proposing a perceivable dimension where the rule of perspective that underlies our sense of perception is reversed, or recanted. Slack (1968-1972) Slack is Takamatsu's grid installation series. Slack of Net features cords tied into a grid-like net, while Slack of Clothconsists of rectangular pieces of cloth sewn together to form square shapes. Both are formed with a taut square perimeter, but are constructed to have slack in the centre of the square. The works are displayed on walls and on the floor, in order to visualise the gravity affected the slacked construction and the space it occupied in the gallery space respectively. Slackcan be understood as a continuation of the Perspective series, in which the representation and perception of space is distorted by Takamatsu's mode of centering optical effects in the physical construct of these installations. However, unlike Perspective, Slack was not well received, its immediate visual appearance of sagging in the centre of the square (grids) deemed ineffective as a structure or visualisation. Duncan observes Takamatsu's process of transforming the ordinary object and material to be secondary to his questioning of our ability to conceive the one-ness of things in their different and multiple forms. Takamatsu would go on to develop the Onenessseries by utilising other kinds of materials (singular per edition), such as concrete and paper. Compound Continuing a deregulation of form, Takamatsu's Compound series poses objects consisting of assemblages which undo our assumptions of form. Chairs are rendered unseat-able by positioning a brick underneath its leg, slabs of iron and brass posed as weightless by being held up by a piece of thin string. Writing Takamatsu was not considered an art critic but was frequently in conversation with art critic contemporaries. Japanese critics frequently referenced statements by Euro-american artists, and artists like Marcel Duchamp influenced the anti-art movements of Japan. Takamatsu's writing was loosely theoretical in nature, making marked observations about the interconnectedness of sociality and objects. In a series of essays titled “Sekai kakudai keikaku” (“A Plan for World Ex-pansion”), Takamatsu portrays an ever-evolving complexification of social ties. Yoshida Kenchi describes Takamatsu's rose as reminiscent of Allan Kaprow's description of happenings, moving through imaginary and hallucinatory moments with a tone more passive than active. Each detail leads to another without any rational direction as objects keep piling up and getting stuck to one another. "This cacophony of things, images, events, and bodies in Takamatsu's essay “Fuzai tai no tameni [For That Which That Does Not Exist]" turn into four lengthy rope-like sentences meandering through the complex intertwining of subjecthood and objecthood. His reflection on everyday experience recounts the boredom and countless things combining into interminable series that hopelessly postpone the conclusion." ==Exhibitions==
Exhibitions
Selected solo exhibitions1966 Jiro Takamatsu “Identification”, Tokyo Gallery, Tokyo • 1996 Jiro Takamatsu at Present, Niigata City Art Museum, Niigata and Mitaka City Gallery of Art, Tokyo • 1967 Jiro Takamatsu, Naviglio2-Galleria d’Arte, Milano, Italia • 1999 Jiro Takamatsu―Paintings and Drawings for “Shadow”, The National Museum of Art, Osaka2000 Jiro Takamatsu―1970s Three-dimensional Works and Others, Chiba City Museum of Art, Chiba • 2004 Jiro Takamatsu―Universe of His Thoughts, Fuchu Art Museum, Tokyo and Kitakyushu Municipal Museum of Art, Fukuoka • 2009 Permanent Collection 3 Jiro Takamatsu Collection in Hiroshima “Point’ ‘Line’ ‘Form of Absence”, Hiroshima-City Museum of Contemporary Art, Hiroshima • 2011 Jiro Takamatsu Words and Things – Refinement and Tautology – NADiff Gallery, Tokyo • 2014 Takamatsu Jiro: Mysteries, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo2015 Jiro Takamatsu: Trajectory of Work, The National Museum of Art, Osaka2017 Jiro Takamatsu: The Temperature of Sculpture, Henry Moore Institute, Leeds, UK Selected group exhibitions1958 The 10th Yomiuri Indépendant Exhibition, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo • 1963 Room in Alibi, Naiqua Gallery, Tokyo • 1963 The 15th Yomiuri Indépendant Exhibition, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo • 1967 5e Biennale de Paris, Manifestation Biennale et Internationale des Jeunes Artistes, Musee d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, France • 1968 La Biennale de Venezia, 34. Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte, Venezia, Italia • 1970 The 10th Tokyo Biennale—Between Man and Matter, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo and Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto and others • 1971 6th Guggenheim International Exhibition, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA • 1977 Documenta 6, Kassel, Deutschland • 1981 The A Decade of Change in Contemporary Japanese Art, The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo and The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto1985 Reconstructions: Avant-Garde Art in Japan 1945-1965, Museum of Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, UK/Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh, UK • 1986 Japon des Avant-Gardes, 1910-1970, Le Centre National d’Art et de Culture Georges Pompidou, Paris, France • 1994 Japanese Art after 1945: Scream against the Sky, Yokohama Museum of Art, Kanagawa; Guggenheim Museum SoHo, New York, USA; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in association with the Center for the Arts at Yerba Buena Gardens, San Francisco, • 1995 Matter and Perception 1970: Mono-ha and the Search for Fundamentals, The Museum of Fine Arts Gifu, Gifu; Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Hiroshima and others • 2000 Japanese Art in the 20th Century―100 Years Depicted by Art, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Tokyo • 2006 Tokyo―Berlin / Berlin―Tokyo, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo • 2010 Shadows: Works from the National Museums of Art, The National Art Center, Tokyo2012 Tokyo 1955 – 1970: A New Avant-Garde, The Museum of Modern Art, New York2012 Collection: Focus on Mono-ha―Japanese Art of the‘70s, The National Museum of Art, Osaka2012 Tama and the Present Time” Permanent Exhibition, Fuchu Art Museum, Tokyo • 2013 Tricks and Vision to Mono-ha, Tokyo Gallery + Beijing Art Projects • 2015 For a New World to Come, Experiments in Japanese Art and Photography, 1968–1979, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA/Grey Art Gallery, New York University, USA/Japan Society Gallery, USA • 2016 Provoke: Photography in Japan between Protest and Performance, 1960-1975, The Art Institute of Chicago, USA • 2018 Minimalism: Space. Light. Object., National Gallery Singapore, Singapore • 2019 DECODE: Events & Records–Post-Industrial Art, The Museum of Modern Art, Saitama • 2019 INSIDE OUT: JIRO TAKAMATSU AND KEIJI UEMATSU IN CONVERSATION / An exhibition of post-war Japanese sculpture, Royal Society of Sculptors, Dora House, London, UK ==Collection==
Collection
The Takamatsu Jiro Estate is managed by Yumiko Chiba Associates. Takamatsu's work is also found in the following institutional collections. • The National Museum of Modern Art, TokyoThe National Museum of Art, OsakaMuseum of Contemporary Art TokyoSolomon R. Guggenheim MuseumMinneapolis Institute of ArtThe Dallas Museum of ArtThe Museum of Modern Art, New YorkTatePace Gallery • The Rachofsky Collection ==References==
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