The Life of Animals in Japanese Art | teamLab

メイン画像
The Life of Animals in Japanese Art
전시 종료
2019.06.02(Sun) - 08.18(Sun)워싱턴 D.C.

Group Exhibition

メイン画像
The Life of Animals in Japanese Art
전시 종료
2019.06.02(Sun) - 08.18(Sun)워싱턴 D.C.

Group Exhibition

작품

United, Fragmented, Repeated and Impermanent World

Itō Jakuchū (1716–1800) was an early modern Japanese painter who was active in Kyoto in the mid-Edo period. Jakuchū has left us with a unique style of painting in which the surface is made up of a grid of tens of thousands of squares that are individually colored. This work was inspired by the screen paintings Birds, Animals, and Flowering Plants and Trees, Flowers, Birds and Animals.
Jakuchū’s square paintings remind us of computer-generated pixel art. It has been proposed that Jakuchū’s squares pictures were inspired by industrial production constraints in the designs of Nishijin (traditional high-quality silk fabric that is woven in Nishijin, Kyoto). Pixel art was also born from functional limitations. Those functional limitations no longer exist but pixel art is still a very popular form of expression. This is perhaps why we feel an intuitive digital sense to Jakuchū's square works. The colors of Jakuchū’s work are the result of the optical phenomena of visual mixing of color combinations within the squares. It appears as if Jakuchū understood optical mixing of colors at a time before Impressionism and Pointillism. 
This artwork was created in a virtual 3-D space in which 3-D animals move. The space was then converted into what teamLab calls ultrasubjective space. Then,  the color in the 3-D space is split by the color pattern of the squares. For example, if the pattern of a square is colored in red and blue, that part corresponds to purple in the three dimensional space. 
The squares of the screen are fixed while the space continues to move, and thus the color inside the squares is on a different time axis to the space. Seen as a whole from a distance, brilliantly shining  colors occur, and the world of plants and animals in the space will move at a slow time axis. When viewed up close, the colors divided by the finely drawn patterns of each square will change on a rapid time axis. Two time axes co-exist in this work.
In addition, parts of the image squares are filled in with the most frequent color in the squares, forming an abstract world. Furthermore, when a visitor stands in front of the work, the squares near them are similarly painted. The plants and animals move in space, but are abstracted by the fixed squares on-screen, creating a new visual expression through pixel art.

관람안내

전시회장 정보

The Life of Animals in Japanese Art

기간

2019.06.02(Sun) - 08.18(Sun)

개관시간

Mon – Sat 10:00 – 17:00
Sun 11:00 – 18:00

관람료

Free

오시는 길

주소

East Building, Concourse Galleries
National Gallery of Art
6th and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC

문의

Contact

Pace Gallery
info@pacegallery.com

TEL

(202) 737-4215
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