HORS PISTES TOKYO 2012
Another Motion of Images / Art and Images Festival
June 2 - June 10
Hors Pistes Tokyo 2012 Teaser
Over the course of 9 days Tokyo will be
transformed into a rich playground for cutting edge films, contemporary art,
live performance, and free-flowing dialogue on the most exciting forms
of avant-garde art. Now in its second edition, the Hors Pistes Tokyo Festival is the younger sibling of the original festival begun in 2006 at the
Centre Pompidou, Paris and promises to be a diverse showcase of international
and Japanese artists. The auspicious opening reception will be held this Saturday (June 2nd) from 6-8pm at Harajuku's art space
Vacant, will see prominent guests such as Sylvie Pras (Head of Cinema Department, Centre Pompidou) and Geraldine Gomez (Hors Pistes Program Director in Paris, Centre Pompidou) as well as participating artists, speakers and performers. This
years program has a special focus on filmmaker, multidisciplinary artist, and
cult figure, Chris Marker. On June 3, 9, 10, there will be special screenings
of his works - some of which feature Japan - at the L'Institut Franco-Japonais de Tokyo, with accompanying talks discussing his relationship with Tokyo in film. Also
scheduled in the program amongst the other screenings are symposiums discussing
the artists who are pushing the boundaries of video art. The festival is not
restricted to film however, with the inclusion of live performances such as the
dance performance on June 9 at the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, followed by a much-hyped night at WWW with live visuals by French crew RDV with DJ set from special guest JD Twitch [Optimo] from the UK. Check
back here for more entries during the festival.
Mio Coxon
Opening Reception
When: June 2nd (Sat) - June 10th (Sun)
Where: Vacant 3-20-13 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo
Website: http://www.horspistestokyo.com/
Photograph by Pascal Gravot Haeberli
Crowds of art-goers
spilled out from the gallery space onto the streets of Tokyo's hip Nakameguro area, and the thumping bass of a DJ set could be heard, at the opening of Shibuhouse' latest installation House 100, on Monday (May
21st). To mark the 1 year anniversary of The Container, the unusual art-space and brainchild of curator Shai
Ohayon, the opening of Tokyo's experimental performance art collective Shibuhouse was held.
Taking the concept of the house outside their usual boundary of a shared residential commune, they have perfectly integrated the use of the shipping
container as a platform for their two-month long endeavour of interviews
with inspirational artists, musicians and other professionals broadcast live via UStream: [http://www.ustream.tv/channel/house-100] or through their Twitter account for regular updates: [@shibuhouse]
The
concept is simple and does not stray from the core of Shibuhouse' philosophy,
according to Keita Saito who founded the loose-collective in 2008 and whom I spoke with during the crowded opening reception.
"The aim is to communicate, so with whoever we interview - a diverse range
of artists, filmmakers and such - the idea is to become closer through communication under the
framework of the 'house'". While visitors to The Container may not see much more than a space roughly converted into an office-type interior with only a couple of chairs, a desk, and a camera-to-PC set-up, the aim is that these live conversations will reach a wider audience through the internet.
With
the theme of communication in mind, it was both fascinating and entertaining to
indulge in the performance art of the Scottish Tokyo-based artist Jack McLean
and his sexy assistant Tomoe and their silent exchange while
making balloon works - ending in flames of anger, literally. Also challenging
communication was artist Martijn Kluit who interacted with the audience while completely
subverting the traditional image of the magician, finally destroying and smashing a dolls head apart.
It seemed The Container, which has steadily grown in popularity and notoriety came of age on the reception night, even being graced by the presence of conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth and prominent Tokyo art scene figure Johnnie Walker. Make sure to keep watch of Shibuhouse as they continue to blur the boundaries of communication whilst challenging and pushing the Japanese contemporary art scene.

Photographs by Pascal Gravot Haeberli
by Mio Coxon
All images courtesy of The Container
Information
The Container
1F Hills Daikanyama 1-8-30 KamiMeguro Meguro-ku Tokyo 153-0051
153-0051東京都目黒区上目黒1-8-30, 1Fヒルズ | map
Opening reception: 21 May 2012, 7.30-9.30pm (Tokyo time)
Reception includes art performances by:
Jack McLean (with Tomoe) and Martijn Kluit, and live DJ sets by Tomad (Maltine Records) and Mokamoka
+ The Container
+ The Container's Facebook page
+ Shibuhouse
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