Symposium: How has Japanese contemporary art changed since 1989?
November 8 (Fri), 2024
- Past Events
- Exhibition Related
- All
- Translation available
Japanese Contemporary Art and the World 1989–2010 (working title), an exhibition organized by the National Art Center, Tokyo, in partnership with M+, Hong Kong, will take place at the NACT in autumn 2025. On November 8, 2024, the NACT will host a symposium featuring distinguished curators and researchers Kathy Halbreich (New York), Yukie Kamiya (New York), and Pi Li (Hong Kong). They will share their insights on Japanese contemporary art and discuss how it has been presented in global contexts over two decades.
Event Information
- Date
- November 8 (Fri), 2024
- Time
15:00 – 18:00 (Door opens at 14:30)
- Venue
The National Art Center, Tokyo, 3F Auditorium
- For who
- All
- How to Participate
Numbered tickets will be distributed from 11:00 at the Information Counter (1F).
- Capacity
Limited to 200
- Admission
Free
- Organized by
The National Art Center, Tokyo; Japan Arts Council; Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan
In partnership with M+
In cooperation with Art Week Tokyo
- Inquiries
For general inquiries: (+81)47-316-2772 (Hello Dial)
- Remarks
*Time and content may change without prior notice.
*English-Japanese simultaneous interpretation available.
*Recording or photography of this event is not permitted.
*The video recording of this event will be available online at a later date.
*Please note that photo documentation of this event may be published for the purpose of our activity reports and publicity.
Details
Timeline:
15:00 – 15:05 Greetings from Eriko Osaka (Director General, the National Art Center, Tokyo)
15:05 – 15:15 Greetings and the outline of the exhibition by Doryun Chong (Artistic Director and Chief Curator, M+)
15:15 – 15:55 Keynote Speech by Kathy Halbreich (Independent curator and philanthropy advisor,
former Executive Director of Robert Rauschenberg Foundation and first Associate Director of MoMA, NY)
15:55 – 16:15 Presentation by Yukie Kamiya (Art critic, independent curator)
16:15 – 16:35 Presentation by Pi Li (Head of Art, Tai Kwun Contemporary)
16:35 – 16:50 --- intermission (15 min.) ---
16:50 – 16:00 Introduction of the research process by Isabella Tam (Curator, Visual Art, M+) and Jihye Yun (Curator, the NACT)
17:00 – 17:45 Roundtable discussion
17:45 – 18:00 Q&A
18:00 End of session
Speakers
Kathy Halbreich (Independent curator and philanthropy advisor, former Executive Director of Robert Rauschenberg Foundation and first Associate Director of MoMA, NY)
Kathy Halbreich is an independent curator and philanthropy advisor. |
Yukie Kamiya (Art critic, independent curator)
Art Critic, Independent Curator Kamiya served as Gallery Director of Japan Society, New York, Chief Curator of Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, and Associate Curator of New Museum, New York. She was a co-curator of the 12th Shanghai Biennial (2018-19). Kamiya has organized exhibitions bridging Asia and other regions on cross-temporal themes with an interdisciplinary approach, and curated/co-curated solo exhibitions of Japanese artists, as well as group exhibitions such as Radicalism in the Wilderness: Japanese Artists in the Global 1960s (Japan Society, 2029), Discordant Harmony: Critical Reflection on the Imagination of Asia (toured four cities in Asia, 2015-18), and Re:Quest Japanese Contemporary Art since the 1970s (at Museum of Art Seoul National University, 2013). She was honored with the Academic Prize from the Western Art Foundation, Japan (2011). Kamiya is an advisory committee of the National Center for Art Research, Japan, a member of AICA (International Association of Art Critics), and an advisory board of Shigeko Kubota Video Art Foundation. She co-authored publications including Ravaged: Art and Culture in Times of Conflict (Mercatorfonds, 2014), California-Pacific Triennial (Orange County Museum, 2013), and Creamier: Contemporary Art in Culture (Phaidon, 2010). |
Pi Li (Head of Art, Tai Kwun Contemporary)
Pi Li is the Head of Art of Taikwun Contemporary, Hong Kong. He was a former Sigg senior curator and Head of Curatorial Affairs of M+ Hong Kong. He previously served as the deputy executive director of the art administration department at the Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA, 2001–12); the co-founder and director of Universal Studios-Beijing (2005–12), later Boers-Li Gallery in Beijing. |
Doryun Chong (Artistic Director and Chief Curator, M+)
Photo: Dan Leung |
Doryun Chong is Artistic Director and Chief Curator, M+, Hong Kong. He was appointed as the inaugural Chief Curator of M+ in 2013. From 2016 to September 2024, he also served as Deputy Director, Curatorial. For over a decade, Chong has overseen all curatorial activities and programmes at M+, including collections, exhibitions, learning and public programmes, publications, and digital initiatives across the museum’s three main disciplinary areas of design and architecture, moving image, and visual art. Leading up to and following the museum’s grand opening in November 2021, he has led the transformative growth of the M+ Collections and steered the museum’s curatorial direction and pedagogical practices, foregrounding the transcultural and transnational narratives of twentieth- and twenty-first-century global visual culture from a uniquely Asian perspective rooted in Hong Kong. He has curated and overseen more than twenty exhibitions prior to the museum’s opening, including Noguchi for Danh Vo: Counterpoint (2018) at the M+ Pavilion in the Art Park of the West Kowloon Cultural District. He has also helped organize and supervise the five editions of Hong Kong’s participation in the Venice Biennale from 2015 to 2024, bringing a new generation of Hong Kong artists and curators to the international stage. He co-curated (with Mika Yoshitake) Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now, the most comprehensive retrospective of the celebrated Japanese artist to date, which opened to great critical acclaim and positive public reception at M+ in November 2022. It later toured to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in 2023, becoming one of the most visited exhibitions in that museum’s history, and then to Serralves Museum in Porto, Portugal, in 2024. He is a co-curator of Picasso for Asia: A Conversation, co-organised by M+ and Musée national Picasso-Paris, which will open at M+ in March 2025. Prior to joining M+, Chong worked the Museum of Modern Art in New York (2009–2013), the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (2003–2009), and the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco (1999–2000). He has curated several landmark exhibitions, including major retrospectives of Tetsumi Kudo (2008) and Huang Yong Ping (2005) and a survey of postwar Japanese art, Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde (2012). Chong has published and lectured widely and served on numerous award juries and public panels across Asia, North America, and Europe. He is a member of the Sounding Board at Haus der Kunst München. He earned his Bachelor of Arts and completed doctoral studies in the history of art at the University of California, Berkeley. |
Isabella Tam (Curator, Visual Art, M+)
Isabella Tam is Curator of Visual Art at M+, a museum of visual culture in Hong Kong. Her expertise lays in contemporary art in Asia with specific focus on the parallel development and exchanges of Chinese art, Japanese art, and photography in global contemporary discourse. She was in the inaugural team contributed to the building of the institution’s premier collection of Asia contemporary art and the opening display. Exhibitions she curated or organized includes, Right Is Wrong: Four Decades of Chinese Art in M+ Sigg Collection (Buildmuseet, Umeå, 2014, Whitworth Gallery, Manchester, 2015) , M+ Sigg Collection: From Revolution to Globalisation (2021-2023), Sigg Prize 2023, and the full retrospective of Yayoi Kusama: 1945 to Now (2022). She is the curator of Yasumasa Morimura & Cindy Sherman: Masquerades, which will open in December 2024. Tam was also a curator-in-residency at the Tokyo Arts and Space in 2023, and was a curatorial fellow at that Whitechapel Gallery, London, 2011. She also sits on international jury panel of the Three Shadows Photography Awards 2024 and the Sony World Photography Awards 2025. |
Jihye Yun (Curator, the National Art Center, Tokyo)
Curator at the National Art Center, Tokyo. |
Streaming
Archived video will be available on the National Art Center, Tokyo’s YouTube channel at a later date.