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Independent films
fromFilmmaker Magazine
6 days ago

"The Scorpion Doesn't Die": Japanese Actress Meiko Kaji on Her 60-Year Career

Meiko Kaji's iconic performances in Japanese cinema showcase her authority and resilience in portraying complex, defiant characters over six decades.
Video games
fromFilmmaker Magazine
5 days ago

Let's Play: Genki Kawamura and Jiro Nagae on a New Kind of Video Game Cinema

Genki Kawamura adapts the indie video game into a film, merging artistry with box office potential in a unique horror narrative.
Social justice
fromHarper's BAZAAR
2 weeks ago

The Women of the Bund Fought to Free Their Loved Ones

Visitation at Rikers Island highlights the strength and solidarity of women supporting incarcerated loved ones amidst systemic humiliation and bureaucratic obstacles.
Arts
fromwww.7x7.com
4 days ago

Chiharu Shiota's jaw-dropping yarnscapes take over the Asian Art Museum.

Chiharu Shiota's exhibition explores memory, trauma, and personal experience through immersive installations using red yarn and historical artifacts.
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

Victoria Tentler-Krylov's "Parallel Lives"

"Most people don't stop to observe the crews' work or the infrastructure they uncover," Tentler-Krylov said. "But these unseen things keep the city going."
London
#japanese-literature
Books
fromAnOther
2 weeks ago

Mieko Kawakami's New Novel Exposes the Tokyo Underworld of the 90s

Sisters in Yellow portrays a teenage girl's descent into the Japanese underworld after her mother disappears, exploring themes of loneliness and class struggle.
Books
fromAnOther
2 weeks ago

Mieko Kawakami's New Novel Exposes the Tokyo Underworld of the 90s

Sisters in Yellow portrays a teenage girl's descent into the Japanese underworld after her mother disappears, exploring themes of loneliness and class struggle.
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
3 weeks ago

Your Carry-On Isn't Ready for Cherry Blossom Season in Japan - These 9 Designs Are - Yanko Design

Camera (1) is a compact, metal-bodied camera designed for ease of use, featuring a single-edge control layout that allows for quick adjustments without navigating a touchscreen. This design is particularly beneficial during cherry blossom season when moments are fleeting and require immediate capture.
Photography
#theresa-hak-kyung-cha
Mission District
fromMission Local
3 weeks ago

People We Meet: Nory Sasaki, 'The life of a flower is short'

Nory Sasaki transforms root vegetables into art, showcasing his culinary skills and dedication to beauty in his garage workshop.
fromFuncheap
3 weeks ago

Free Multimedia Concert: Women Crossing/Liminality (SF)

The concert features 'Field of Sorrow,' a new work by Juhi Bansal, which sets translations of landays, women's poetry from Afghanistan, for soprano, cello, and piano.
SF music
fromHyperallergic
1 week ago

Kamrooz Aram Is Everywhere

The Duchamp exhibition at MoMA is encyclopedic, thought-provoking, and sometimes surprising. It spans the entire sixth floor and invites viewers to engage deeply with his work.
Arts
Music
fromBrooklynVegan
3 weeks ago

Kikagaku Moyo's Go Kurosawa touring US in support of solo debut

Go Kurosawa, former drummer and singer of Japanese psych band Kikagaku Moyo, launches his solo career with debut album soft shakes and begins his first US tour in 2026.
fromwww.archdaily.com
3 weeks ago

Monologue Cafe / SOSOKKI ANAC

Monologue A Walker in Time's Soliloquy originates from a speculative narrative imagining that the Earth has undergone a reset. The project begins with a simple question: if an ancient civilization once existed before this reset, and a monastery had been built within that forgotten world, what architectural form might it have taken?
Renovation
#ruth-asawa
fromKqed
2 weeks ago
Arts

Soon, You Can Visit Ruth Asawa's Art Whenever You Like | KQED

A new exhibition space for Ruth Asawa's works will open at the Minnesota Street Project on May 9.
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago
Arts

Guggenheim Bilbao showcases Ruth Asawa, the artist who turned the barbed wire of her concentration camp into art

Ruth Asawa's internment during WWII catalyzed her artistic career, leading to renowned wire sculptures that reflect her experiences.
Arts
fromsfist.com
2 weeks ago

New Dogpatch Gallery to Open This Spring Honoring Ruth Asawa's Work and Legacy

A new gallery dedicated to Ruth Asawa's work opens this spring, celebrating her 100th birthday and her contributions to art and education.
Arts
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

Soon, You Can Visit Ruth Asawa's Art Whenever You Like | KQED

A new exhibition space for Ruth Asawa's works will open at the Minnesota Street Project on May 9.
Arts
fromenglish.elpais.com
3 weeks ago

Guggenheim Bilbao showcases Ruth Asawa, the artist who turned the barbed wire of her concentration camp into art

Ruth Asawa's internment during WWII catalyzed her artistic career, leading to renowned wire sculptures that reflect her experiences.
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Culture of care: surreal celebrations of Iranian tenderness in pictures

Sheida Soleimani's work reframes caring for bodies as a political act in her exhibition, Forest of Stars.
Arts
fromColossal
1 week ago

Yamamoto Masao's Otherworldly Portraits Introduce Us to Expressive Owls

Yamamoto Masao's photographs evoke emotional connections between image and memory, focusing on owls and their diminishing habitats.
Miscellaneous
fromThe Nation
1 month ago

Tehching Hsieh-an "Artist Without Art"

Tehching Hsieh conducted yearlong endurance performances including solitary confinement, time-clock punching, street living, and tethering to another artist, establishing himself in New York's avant-garde art world.
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Mitski Shares Her Cultural Essentials

I think, even though she's world famous with millions of fans, I still think she's underrated, because yes, she's the greatest singer in the world, but also, she doesn't get enough credit for her songwriting. She's written amazing songs over many years consistently and she's really innovated in recorded music and I don't know, I just think she's a genius and people don't realize that she is a genius.
Music
fromDefector
1 month ago

Yoko Tawada Is A Genius In Any Language | Defector

The best argument I can make for why I like reading fiction in translation is because it facilitates the psychedelic experience of encountering someone else's subjectivity twice over. The translator must act as a prismatic filter, faithfully attempting the impossible task of replicating someone else's experiences and ideas. To read in translation is to read two stories in harmony with each other: The one the author wants to tell and the one the translator has brought into your linguistic world.
Writing
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

DHS Appropriates Japanese Artist's Work in Racist X Post

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is using my artwork without permission ... What should I do ... Since the other party is so large, I'm honestly at a loss.
Arts
Music
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Mitski review pop meets performance art in a masterful spectacle

Mitski strategically withdrew from social media and public visibility while her career flourished, using performance restraint and choreography as protective armor against celebrity consumption.
#yayoi-kusama
Arts
fromwww.dw.com
3 weeks ago

At 97, Japan's art icon Yayoi Kusama is Instagram-ready

Yayoi Kusama's art reflects her mental health struggles and personal experiences, transforming hallucinations into immersive installations and polka dot sculptures.
Arts
fromwww.dw.com
3 weeks ago

97 years old and Instagram-ready: Art icon Yayoi Kusama

Yayoi Kusama's art reflects her mental health struggles and personal experiences, transforming challenges into immersive installations and polka dot sculptures.
#mitski
fromThe Art Newspaper - International art news and events
3 weeks ago

British artist Simon Fujiwara tackles Guernica, syphilis and the death of a Japanese pornstar in Luxembourg survey exhibition

This depicts Guernica after the battle. The figures are no longer fighting. They're in a giant pile. They're exhausted and there's a sunrise on a new day behind them. The title of the work is A Whole New World (for Who?). It's asking what's going to happen after the conflicts that we have. Who's going to be taken into that new world?
Arts
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Half of Japan's samurai were women, groundbreaking exhibition at British Museum says

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
History
Gadgets
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 months ago

Naoto Fukasawa on Poetic Observation and Designing the realme 16 Pro Urban Wild - Yanko Design

Urban Wild Design transforms smartphones into organic, jewelry-like objects through bio-based textures and polished frames, reflecting settled optimal size and everyday emotional attachment.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Can an Art Exhibit Answer a Zen Koan?

Koans are paradoxical Zen prompts meant to disrupt habitual analytical thinking and open access to deeper, nonconceptual awareness.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

People ought to know': Blue Boy Trial brings Japan's trans history up to date

The original legal case concerned a doctor who was prosecuted for performing gender reassignment surgery on transgender women, amid law enforcement frustrations that female-presenting transgender sex workers could not be prosecuted for their profession due to their being legally male. The doctor was found guilty of violating Japan's eugenics laws, which prohibited surgeries resulting in sterilisation if they were deemed inessential.
LGBT
fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
2 months ago

Lady Gaga halts Tokyo concert to condemn ICE

I want to take a second to talk about something that's extremely important to me. Something important to people all over the world and especially in America right now. In a couple of days, I'm gonna be heading home and my heart is aching thinking about the people, the children, the families, all over America, who are being mercilessly targeted by ICE,
US politics
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

Iranian Artist Speaks Her Heart

The Lower East Side institution's OMA-designed, $82 million expansion debuted this week to mixed reviews, reflecting a range of opinions on its new look and functionality.
Arts
Music
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

Mitski's New Album Is a Dark Ode to Isolation

Mitski's eighth album features a reclusive woman confronting a hostile external world while finding solace in her isolated interior life.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

Zarina Brought the World to New York

Zarina's artistic practice, rooted in South Asian history and shaped by migration and displacement, established her as a foundational figure for South Asian American artists while maintaining independence from nationalist frameworks.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
3 weeks ago

Remembering Axel Burrough, Kazumasa Nagai, and Eliane Radigue

The art world recently lost pioneering figures including an electronic music innovator, architects, sculptors, muralists, and illustrators who shaped cultural institutions and public spaces globally.
#contemporary-art
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
1 month ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - No Coward Soul: Rachel Gregor @ Hashimoto Contemporary, San Francisco

Rachel Gregor's exhibition explores faith, resilience, and hope through intimate domestic imagery, using glass as a metaphor for the boundary between safety and uncertainty.
Arts
fromFuncheap
1 month ago

Free Art Show: Feminicons by Georgia Dominici (SF)

Georgia Dominici's solo art show 'Feminicons' opens March 5th at Hotel Biron Wine Bar, featuring acrylic paintings exploring female archetypes through contemporary pop art style with a raffle benefiting the artist.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
1 month ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - No Coward Soul: Rachel Gregor @ Hashimoto Contemporary, San Francisco

Rachel Gregor's exhibition explores faith, resilience, and hope through intimate domestic imagery, using glass as a metaphor for the boundary between safety and uncertainty.
Arts
fromFuncheap
1 month ago

Free Art Show: Feminicons by Georgia Dominici (SF)

Georgia Dominici's solo art show 'Feminicons' opens March 5th at Hotel Biron Wine Bar, featuring acrylic paintings exploring female archetypes through contemporary pop art style with a raffle benefiting the artist.
fromBOOOOOOOM!
4 weeks ago

"Always Were" by Artist Opal Mae Ong

Ong's work contains a deep reverence for the otherworldly, combining the remnants of ancestral knowledge with speculative visions to form a kind of personal myth-making. The title of their latest series, "Always Were", is intentionally fragmentary suggesting a temporal and grammatical ambiguity that points to the liminal nature of Ong's figures and the time and place they inhabit.
Arts
Miscellaneous
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Anti-ICE protest art is popping up at the Olympics

Graffiti at Rome's CONI shows an ICE agent aiming at an Olympic ski jumper, protesting planned ICE presence at the Olympics and recent police shootings.
fromArtnet News
4 weeks ago

Veronica Fernandez Builds an Uneasy Monument to Childhood Imagination

There's this push and pull between feeling unease and discomfort, the nature of the spaces, and why they feel uncomfortable. But there is also tenderness and warmth, people adapting to these spaces and finding ways to make them comfortable.
Arts
fromDesign Milk
2 months ago

The KOKUYO DIG Office in Tokyo Doubles as a Space for Learning

Workplaces serve as centers to support business transactions, often with cues from traditional corporate styling but little else. For its new office in Tokyo, the staff at KOKUYO, a leading manufacturer of office furniture, stationery, and supplies, envisioned a combination work and learning hub that sparks child-like imagination. The 5,317-square-foot space, completed by DDAA in collaboration with KOKUYO's own design team, centers on the theme of learning.
Design
fromYanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
2 months ago

7 Best Japanese-Designed Valentine's Gifts That Look $1000+, But Cost Half That - Yanko Design

Japanese design has spent centuries perfecting the balance between restraint and richness. These seven gifts embody that philosophy, where every material choice and geometric decision carries intention. From transparent polycarbonate that frames music like sculpture to hand-planted bristles that honor century-old brush-making techniques, each piece reflects the considered craftsmanship that typically commands luxury prices. The precision is palpable, the materials exceptional, yet the cost remains accessible.
Design
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

Indira Cesarine on the Feminist Issues Driving the Untitled Space

Indira Cesarine founded Untitled Space to platform marginalized voices in art, operating as gallerist, artist, editor, and curator while exploring female identity through personal and collective experience.
#textile-installations
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago
Arts

chiharu shiota's woven webs meet yin xiuzhen's clothing installations at hayward gallery

Hayward Gallery presents two major concurrent textile installations by Chiharu Shiota and Yin Xiuzhen that transform ordinary materials into immersive spatial explorations of memory, identity, and shared human experience through large-scale installations.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago
Arts

Fabric of memory: the artists turning secondhand clothes into monumental art

Worn garments and woven threads act as carriers of personal and collective memory, embedding social meaning and identity within textile-based installations.
Arts
fromdesignboom | architecture & design magazine
1 month ago

chiharu shiota's woven webs meet yin xiuzhen's clothing installations at hayward gallery

Hayward Gallery presents two major concurrent textile installations by Chiharu Shiota and Yin Xiuzhen that transform ordinary materials into immersive spatial explorations of memory, identity, and shared human experience through large-scale installations.
Arts
fromArtnet News
1 month ago

Japan's Art Market Registers Modest Growth: Report. Plus, a Rundown of the Latest in Asia's Art World | Artnet News

Japan's art market grew two percent to $692 million in 2024 despite global contraction, with dealers dominating sales and most transactions under $10,000.
fromAnOther
1 month ago

Chiharu Shiota, the Artist Making Human Connection Tangible

Known most for her large-scale artworks created from vast, intricate networks of thread, she developed her unique practice to make tangible the endless speculative configurations of human connections - something to be experienced rather than defined. But by asking her to describe her new exhibition, Threads of Life at the Hayward Gallery, I'm dragging her back into a reductive world of language. "If I wanted to express myself in words, if I could explain in words, I'd rather write," she says. "So I want to build visually, and I want to create visually. What I want to describe is beyond words."
Arts
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Yoko Ono's Art Is an Exercise in Hope

CHICAGO - With her iconic long dark hair curtaining her demure countenance, Yoko Ono has been in my personal pantheon of women makers for most of my life. When I was a distraught teenager in a midwestern suburb, she was there - singing discordant arias from my bedroom stereo. Her siren call couldn't quite be deciphered, but, like a feminist signal from afar, it cut through the fog of oppressive cultural forces.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Koyo Kouoh's Final Show

Each artist functions almost as a musical key signature of their own, which together 'refuse the orchestral bombast and goose-step military marches and come alive in the quiet tones, the lower frequencies.' That description comes from Rasha Salti, one of the exhibition advisors who spoke at yesterday's announcement of the roster. It's an apt invitation to think of curation as an act of composition, with Kouoh's vision singing at every turn.
Arts
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Ayako Rokkaku "SCENERY IN THE PROCESS OF BEING FORMED" @ Konig Galerie, Berlin

Ayako Rokkaku’s work emphasizes tactile, hand-driven processes where landscapes and collected materials shape sculptures, glass, fabric, bronze, ceramics, and paintings as form slowly appears.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
2 months ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Christian Rex van Minnen "Metanoia" @ Nanzuka Underground, Tokyo

Christian Rex van Minnen presents 15 new paintings blending Baroque technique, Surrealism, grotesque black humor, and a new sincere still-life series reflecting personal metanoia.
Arts
fromJuxtapoz
1 month ago

Juxtapoz Magazine - Takashi Murakami: Hark Back to Ukiyo-e: Tracing Superflat to Japonisme's Genesis @ Perrotin, Los Angeles

Takashi Murakami presents 24 new paintings tracing ukiyo-e's influence on Impressionism and exploring bijinga's global impact at Perrotin Los Angeles.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

"By Design" Treats Women Like Objects

A woman transforms into a chair in a surrealist comedy that exposes how consumer culture conflates femininity with material desire and envy.
fromHyperallergic
2 months ago

Naoto Nakagawa 2026 Is on View at KAPOW

Naoto Nakagawa's current show at KAPOW brings together a significant group of new acrylic paintings and intimate watercolors, situating his recent practice within both the Japanese shunga tradition of erotic art and his own six-decade exploration of perception, material culture, and the natural world. On view at KAPOW in Manhattan's Lower East Side through February 22, works across the exhibition resonate with themes that have defined Nakagawa's career since the 1960s - most notably his persistent pairing of man-made objects with organic life.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Marigold Santos Takes Root

The only thing most people know about epiphytes, if they know about them at all, is that they're rootless. That's not quite true - they develop highly specialized root systems adapted to wherever they land. In Epiphytic Elucidations at Patel Brown Gallery, Calgary-based artist Marigold Santos takes this fact as more than a metaphor. The exhibition uses epiphytes - plants that grow on other plants without harming them - as a framework for the expansive ways diasporas form through material labor.
Arts
fromColossal
2 months ago

Szilveszter Mako's Surreal Photographs Reconstruct the Boundaries of Portraiture

Szilveszter Makó 's enigmatic photographs carry layers of mystery and introspection. Standing inside curious block-like backdrops and lain against two-dimensional fields of color and texture, his subjects seamlessly meld into stories in which every detail carries intention. Taking inspiration from art history, the Milan-based artist references Surrealism and grotesque art through his use of chiaroscuro effects via light exploration and contrasting earth tones.
Arts
Arts
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Artist Sarah Sze: A work of art is finished when everything teeters'

Sarah Sze’s Gagosian Beverly Hills exhibition uses 13 works—large, intricate paintings and video installations—to create immersive, disorienting landscapes reflecting an image‑saturated, unstable contemporary world.
Arts
fromHyperallergic
1 month ago

Art Movements: Marilyn Minter Wins Again

Marilyn Minter won the 2026 Anderson Ranch International Artist Award amid a wave of museum appointments, gallery signings, and leadership changes.
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