Introduction

Kyoto Art Walk 2008

Encounters

Kyoto Art Walk 2008 is taking place both in venues that were used during the Kyoto Art Walk 2005 - Nijojo Castle Ninomaru Palace Kitchen and the Kyodo (Sutra Hall) and Jojuin of the Kiyomizudera - and in new venues in the Tofukuji and the Sanshisuimeisho.

The installations created in these spaces will have evolved out of the experience of walking the streets of Kyoto, gazing up at the surrounding hills and observing the light that flits across the surface of the Kamo River like the birds that fly above it. They will draw on the experience of seeing the neatly built shelters of the homeless, of sipping tea in an atmosphere laden with the weight and depth of Kyoto's long history.

The forms of Japanese art are complete in and of themselves. You cannot add to them, nor can you subtract from them.

Walking the treasure house that is Kyoto and breathing in its intoxicating air, one's visit is like the passing of the breeze. Kyoto's history and culture can be likened to living cells, the universe and a contextual landscape. To wander through these is the theme and purpose of this project.

Modern man lives in the midst of war, poverty and unending strife and destruction. The five artists participating in Kyoto Art Walk 2008 are Mark Wallinger, Jean-Luc Vilmouth, Tadashi Kawamata, Katsuhito Nishikawa and Matt Golden. They will all be travellers and pilgrims to Kyoto. At the same time they will be quiet messengers who reflect on society and the modern world.

Like gusts of wind from afar, their creative visions will blow through and be transformed by the Kyoto they meet. What will we discover through their encounters with the inherited perfection of the past and the chaos of today?

Every walk is a unique event, an 'ichigo ichie' of traditional Japanese parlance.

As we walk the streets of Kyoto, chance meetings are followed by unexpected discoveries. It will be this series of unrepeatable encounters that will constitute Kyoto Art Walk 2008.

Yuko Shiraishi
2008
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