FEMINISMS

2021.10.16 (Sat.) -
2022.3.13 (Sun.) *Title and contents of the exhibition are subject to change.

Information

Period:

2021.10.16 (Sat.) -
2022.3.13 (Sun.) *Title and contents of the exhibition are subject to change.
10:00-18:00(until 20:00 on Fridays and Saturdays)

Venue:

21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa
Galleries 11, 12 and 14

Closed:

Mondays (except November 1 and November 22, 2021, and January 3 and January 10, 2022); November 24; December 29 – January 1; January 4; January 11

Admission:

Adults: ¥1,200 (¥1,000)
Students: ¥800 (¥600)
18 and under: ¥400 (¥300)
65 and over: ¥1,000

*Fees in parentheses are for groups of 20 people or more and web tickets
*Tickets for this exhibition include admission to the concurrently held “Countermeasures Against Awkward Discourses: From the Perspective of Third Wave Feminism” (October 16, 2021 – March 13, 2022).
*Tickets also include admission (same day only) to “Collection Exhibition 1: Inner Cosmology” (until November 3) and “Collection Exhibition 2: BLUE” (November 20, 2021 – March 13, 2022).

Timed-entry tickets
Web tickets for specific days/times go on sale at 10:00, September 27, 2021
Web tickets for specific days/times are available on museum website

Book tickets here

For More Information:

21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa
Phone: +81-76-220-2800
E-Mail: info@kanazawa21.jp

Feminism in Japan from the 1990s onward was linked to popular culture, focused on girls and young women in Europe and the US, and was disseminated through the media. Young women’s activities in Japan were also featured in the media, particularly a brand of feminism that became known as the “Girly Movement.” However, in Japan’s case it cannot be denied that in some ways the movement was less a call for change than it was fodder for the media, turning images of women into objects for consumption. Laws such as the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1986 and the Basic Act for a Gender Equal Society of 1999 were passed and a gender-equal society seemed to be on the way, but in reality there remained a pervasive sense of incongruity between the individual and society, as seen in the marital and family systems, social norms of heterosexuality, and conventions of femininity and masculinity.
Now, in the 2020s, social changes are stirring as small voices raising dissent connect through the Internet and gain strength. Feminism, which was thought of as only for women, is extending a helping hand to anyone who feels out of place in society. In recent years, the word has begun to be used in the plural form: feminisms. Ways of thinking about and understanding feminism differ depending on people’s generation and era, nation and ethnic group, environment and values. The message of pluralistic feminisms is the importance and necessity of members of society mutually acknowledging diverse ways of thinking. In this exhibition, works by nine artists, each with their own perspective, offer a window into expressions of feminism in Japan, and how artists perceive gender, the body, society, and what lies beyond.

List of works / description

Exhibiting artists

  • Exhibiting artists(in Japanese phonetic order)
    Artists: AOKI Chie / USUI Yui / ENDO Mai / ENDO Mai x MOMOSE Aya / KAZAMA Sachiko / KIMURA Ryoko / NISHIYAMA Minako / MORI Eiki / YUKI Yu-ki

About the artists

  • AOKI Chie, BODY 20-1, 2020
    Courtesy of Sokyo Gallery
    photo: IMAMURA Yuji

    AOKI Chie

    Born 1981 in Gifu. Aoki’s BODY series has the primal theme of confrontation with the subconscious. The deep, lustrous jet-black mirrored surfaces of her urushi (lacquer) works are reminiscent of smooth female skin, and the figures fused with abstract masses seems to be truly alive, beckoning the viewer’s awareness into the interior of the urushi. They express the existence of human beings who live powerfully and vigorously while bearing the burden of complex emotions. Major solo exhibitions include Shikkoku no Shintai, Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Art (2017).

  • USUI Yui, shadow of a coin, 2013-2018
    Private collection
    photo : KOGURE Shinya

    USUI Yui

    Born 1980 in Tokyo. Usui interprets events and history that have been forgotten or overlooked by society through in-depth research, creating works that generate relationality and critique through familiar techniques and materials such as handicrafts and fabric that have traditionally been regarded as “women’s work.” She won the VOCA Award in 2018. Major solo exhibitions include shadow work, Oyama City Kurumaya Museum of Art (Tochigi, 2016).

  • ENDO Mai, I AM NOT A FEMINIST!, 2017/2021
    Creating the marriage contract with MORI Eiki
    at the Goethe-Institut Tokyo
    Film still : FUJIKAWA Takashi, KOYANAGI Tao

    ENDO Mai

    Born 1984 in Hyogo. As an actor and visual artist, Endo’s playful practice incorporates talking, DIY, and acting through the vehicle of her body. She focuses on the marital system and sexual and gender norms, and frequently collaborates with others. Major exhibitions include Rules?, 21_21DESIGN SIGHT (Tokyo, 2021). In 2018, she and MARUYAMA Mika founded the queer/feminist art zine Multiple Spirits. They investigate relationships of influence between Japanese shojo (girls’) culture and queer/feminist activism, and held the exhibition When It Waxes and Wanes in Vienna in 2019.

  • ENDO Mai x MOMOSE Aya, Love Condition, 2020

    ENDO Mai × MOMOSE Aya
    MOMOSE Aya

    Born 1988 in Tokyo. Momose re-examines asymmetries of seeing and being seen, speaking and being spoken about in the moving image, creating video and performance works that explore divergences of voice and body and question social structures and norms centered on the visual. Recent major screenings of works include the 13th Yebisu International Festival for Art & Alternative Vision: PROJECTS: Retouch Me Not, Tokyo Photographic Art Museum (2021).

  • Left : KAZAMA Sachiko, Der Lungenwald-LUNGENWALD, 2021
    woodcut print ( Japanese paper, oil ink), acrylic
    photo: TAKAHASHI Kenji
    ©️Sachiko Kazama, Courtesy of Tokyo Arts and Space
    Right : KAZAMA Sachiko, Der Lungenwald-LINGENBAUM, 2021
    woodcut print ( Japanese paper, oil ink),
    photo: TAKAHASHI Kenji
    ©️Sachiko Kazama, Courtesy of Tokyo Arts and Space
    Collection of the artist

    KAZAMA Sachiko

    Born 1972 in Tokyo. Kazama’s black -and-white woodcut prints shed light on dark corners of the present and its underlying history, drawing on her original research into online discourse and old documents and materials, and capturing the past, present, and future in a single frame. Her comical and cynical works reflect the mentality not of a member of society, but of an outside observer lacking a fixed identity. She won the Tokyo Contemporary Art Award 2019-2021 in 2019, and her work is in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art, New York (USA).

  • KIMURA Ryoko, Beauty of My Dish – Banquet of Mermaids, 2005
    Private collection

    KIMURA Ryoko

    Born 1971 in Kyoto. Interpreting East Asian images of the male figure as bijinga (lit. “pictures of beautiful people,” but traditionally referring to paintings of women), Kimura paints with a perspective that encompasses romance, love, and the sexual gaze from a heterosexual female standpoint. She explores the possibilities of contemporary Nihonga (Japanese -style painting), working in traditional styles such as yamato-e, Kano School painting, and hand-painted ukiyo-e. Major exhibitions include Imayo: Japan’s New Traditionalists, Honolulu Museum of Art (USA, 2016) and Shoto Museum of Art (Tokyo, 2017).

  • NISHIYAMA Minako, ♡ Erica’s Palpitant Teleppon Club ♡, 1992
    photo: NISHIMURA Koichi

    NISHIYAMA Minako

    Born 1965 in Hyogo. Since the early 1990s, Nishiyama has revealed relationships between gender and consumption in Japanese culture by exaggerating visual tropes of shojo (girls’) culture such as the color pink, cuteness, and fragility. Major exhibitions include Knit Café In My Room By Mitsuharu Hirose and Minako Nishiyama, 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (Ishikawa, 2009). Her work is in the collection of the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa.

  • MORI Eiki, Untitled from the series of Family Regained, 2017
    © Eiki Mori, Courtesy of KEN NAKAHASHI

    MORI Eiki

    Born 1976 in Ishikawa. Mori works in various media including photography, video, performance, and text, addressing the subjects of sexuality and gender differences. He presents his own questioning of the present-day family in visual form through observation and participation, distilling social issues with a light and delicate touch. He won the Kimura Ihei Award in 2014. Exhibitions include Shibboleth—I peep the ocean through a hole of the torn cardigan, KEN NAKAHASHI (Tokyo, 2020).

  • Yu-KI Yuki, “For your own good,”, 2020

    Yu-Ki YUKI

    From Shizuoka. While engaging with aspects of Japanese otaku culture such as cosplay, pop idols, and BL (“boys’ love,” manga depicting male same-sex romance primarily targeted at women), Yuki focuses on filters (vessels for desire) that exist in the interzone between self and society, between fiction and reality, endeavoring to question and dismantle constrictive two-way relationships. She won the 21st Taro Okamoto Award for Contemporary Art in 2018. Major exhibitions include Listen to Her Song, The University Art Museum, Tokyo University of the Arts (Tokyo, 2020).

Exhibition catalogue

  • FEMINISMS
    Texts: AOKI Chie / USUI Yui / ENDO Mai / ENDO Mai x MOMOSE Aya / KAZAMA Sachiko / KIMURA Ryoko / NISHIYAMA Minako / MORI Eiki / YUKI Yu-ki / MARUYAMA Mika / TAKAHASHI Ritsuko
    Edit: TAKAHASHI Ritsuko
    Design: MINAMI Tomoko
    Published by: 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa
    Price:1,320 yen (including tax)

Credit

Organized by:

21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (Kanazawa Art Promotion and Development Foundation)

In Cooperation with:

Slacktide Co., Ltd, TOKI CORPORATION