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SATURDAY OCTOBER 9 to THURSDAY OCTOBER 21 2010
Join me, Japan specialist and art enthusiast, Anne Alene, on a once-in-a-lifetime adventure of Japan. My aim is bring alive Japan's artistic culture, people and beauty in a 12-night 13-day travel adventure.
As you may know, I am a Japan specialist designing and leading customized trips to Japan for groups and individuals, museum benefactors, art collectors and cultural organizations. I command near-native fluency in Japanese, having studied, lived in Japan, and worked between Japan and the US for over twenty years. For over ten of the twenty years I have been leading specialized trips to Japan. I hold degrees, training and certifications in Asian Studies, Japanese language, Psychology, Japanese and Western art history and contemporary art; and is also a practitioner of Omotesenke Tea Ceremony
SATURDAY OCTOBER 9 - TUESDAY OCTOBER 12
TOKYO
The tour will commence in Tokyo on the evening of Saturday October 9 at the Mitsui Garden Ginza Premier Hotel, situated near to the Ginza and Tokyo Station.
I am organizing special visits which will make the Tokyo portion of the tour a particularly rich encounter with the city’s artists and personalities. We will have exclusive access to private museums, exhibitions and collections, including an opportunity to discover Japan's expansive visions for promoting the Japanese and international contemporary art scenes.
The unique flair that each architect has designed for these leading designers has forever transformed the shopping experience. For example, a nostalgic housing development initiated by the Imperial Household after WWII withstood earthquakes and disaster for fifty years until Tadao Ando razed the construction to create the new Omotesando Hills housing three underground levels of chic boutiques and eateries, while occupying an awkward triangular real estate plot at the center of the great boulevard’s map.
In addition, a handful of new museum complexes and galleries which debuted between 2004 and 2007 are worth exploring in the fashionable districts of Roppongi Hills and Mid-Town including the National Art Centre, Suntory Museum of Art and Tadao Ando's 21_21 Design Center. A neighborhood addition in 2004 is the Mori Art Museum which is perched on the top of the fifty-four story Mori Tower designed by American Richard Gluckman. Mori Tower and Mori Art Museum are the central pillar of Roppongi Hills, a vast 28-acre development believed to be the most expensive urban regeneration project ever undertaken and a culmination of the vision and philosophy of real estate magnate Minoru Mori.
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Gauging the artist scene of Tokyo will be crucial to the program, including visits to well-known contemporary artists, schedule permitting, and hope to include artists such as Tabaimo, Takashi Murakami, and others who have burst out onto the international scene in recent years.
In no other valid contemporary art destination is a country’s historic culture and traditions as relevant as it is in Japan. I shall be offering a variety of attractions at the beginning or end of the day’s main events. In Tokyo, these attractions will include visits to a kabuki theatre performance, a neighborhood Japanese bath house and to the "otaku" neighborhoods.
Otaku is a Japanese pulp fiction souvenir business, primarily selling anime film, manga comics, and was influential in Takashi Murakami's source materials for his popular paintings, sculptures, video works, and even for the exclusive line of Louis Vuitton accessories.
We will have brunch at the Park Hyatt Hotel, famed for its views across the Kanto Plain to Mount Fuji and the famous bar where Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson puzzled the incomprehension of an unfamiliar culture in “Lost in Translation”, before boarding the Shinkansen bullet train for the next chapters of the tour, including to Izu Peninsula, Ise Peninsula, Kyoto, and the Inland Sea for the Setouchi International Art Festival.
TUESDAY OCTOBER 12 to WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 13
KYOTO VIA IZU PENINSULA AND ISE
On our way to Kyoto, we will make a one night, two day expedition by train and coach.
We will spend the night on the Izu Peninsula eating traditional banquet fare and enjoying healing waters of our hot spring resort.
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 13 to SUNDAY OCTOBER 17
KYOTO
We will also be conducting a very special visit, still under a code name, involving an architectural landmark unknown to most visitors and only accessible by special permission, offering a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to experience the quintessential Japanese aesthetic traditions in its absolute highest form.
Throughout our journey will be dining venues staged to frame the vast experience offered by the Japanese palate and Kyoto promises to be an important destination to experience Japanese cuisine at its ultimate moments. Some of the finest restaurants in Kyoto boast interiors of natural landscapes of woods, water, bamboo trees, rock gardens and private tatami mat dining rooms. Various dishes are served in meticulously chosen vessels ranging from a simple lacquered bowl to a bamboo stalk.
One day will be dedicated to venturing outside of Kyoto proper to the Miho Museum and the recently redesigned Sagawa Art Museum.
The Sagawa Art Museum is dedicated to displaying tea wares designed by the Raku family of 14 generations and exhibitions of leading contemporary ceramicists. Lending to a spiritual experience from the simple process of viewing tea bowls, here Japanese minimalist aesthetics and ancient tea ceremony wares have been united, including interior water features, natural lighting, rooms devoted to one or two bowls, and integrating the surrounding landscape into interior displays.
SUNDAY OCTOBER 17 to WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 20
NAOSHIMA / SETOUCHI INTERNATIONAL ART FESTIVAL
Floating on the Inland Sea of Japan and accessible only by ferry boat, the fabled island of Naoshima is one of the most surprising, and rewarding, contemporary art destinations in Asia and has become the perfect refuge for the pursuit of art on this gorgeous coastal landscape.
On the southern shores of Naoshima small island, Soichiro Fukutake, chairman of Benesse Corporation, has accumulated an extraordinary collection of masterpieces by David Hockney, Jasper Johns, Jannis Kounellis, Richard Long, Bruce Nauman, Cy Twombly, Yayoi Kusama, Tatsuo Miyajima, Hiroshi Senju, Yoshihiro Suda, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Cai Guo-Qiang. The art is displayed on the beach, in restored domestic or storage barn properties in the village, and in two museums designed by Benesse house architect, Tadao Ando.
Another Ando projects to experience is the Chichu Art Museum opened in July 2004 and juxtaposes the work of just three artists: Walter de Maria, who has conceived a room installation worthy of the shrine of a lost civilization; James Turrell, who is represented by three light environments from different stages of his career; and Claude Monet, for whom the museum has created an arrangement of five Nymphéas paintings from the end of his career, including a wide screen Waterlily Pond diptych (c.1915-1920).
Our biggest aim while at Naoshima is to participate in the Setouchi International Art Festival, which marks the arrival of latest projects commissioned by Soichiro Fukutake including additional museums and art installations not only on Naoshima but also on seven neighboring islands
We shall be venturing between Naoshima and a few neighboring islands by private ferry, including a walk through the Inujima Refinery Museum Project (April 2008) with Yukinori Yanagi, famed for his ant farm installations of the Venice Biennale, has been working upon a new project with young star architect Hiroshi Sambuichi. The two had been working in the ruins of a former copper refinery on the small island of Inujima on one of the great Land Art reclamation projects of our time.
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 20 TO THURSDAY OCTOBER 21
The closing chapter of the Japan tour begins with a transit from Naoshima to Osaka through the rural region of Bizen, where we shall be visit the largest kiln in the world, designed and built along medieval kiln standards by a ceramicist Mori Togaku. A visit to such a colossal structure and project will answer many questions of our prior encounters with vessels and visual aesthetics in Japanese life, cuisine and craft while visiting Japan.
Upon arriving in Osaka, we will visit the National Museum of Art which opened in new quarters designed by Cesar Pelli in November 2004. Unusually, for an architect famed for his assertive statements in the sky (including the distinctive towers of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and London’s Canary Wharf), this museum is situated entirely underground. Its profile, however, is immediately recognizable through a stainless steel lattice which resembles the skeletal structure of a bird in flight.
Time and diary permitting, our short day in Osaka could produce a visit to the studio of Tadao Ando or Yasumasa Morimura, the latter whose wardrobe of changing self-portrait personalities is located beneath the city’s railway arches.
THURSDAY OCTOBER 21
DEPARTURE
Depending upon one’s flight arrangements, our gateway airport will be Osaka-Kansai, designed by Renzo Piano and one of the most unique flying experiences in Asia, or Tokyo-Narita International Airport
For more information, please inquire to ageisalene@earthlink.net
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