Exhibition/event has ended.

Chim Pom "Good to be Human"

Yamamoto Gendai
Finished

Artists

Chim Pom
For their second presentation of the "Chim Pom + Mujin-to production -drift-" project, Chim Pom has cast ashore to YAMAMOTO GENDAI. This time they have come up with the phrase "Ningen te iina = how good it is to be human." Along with this complete affirmation of being human, by using 'food' as an keyword, they will present two installations of "kurukuru party" and 'the making of *sokushinbutsu = Living body Buddha' (*A monk goes on a fast while meditating and the dies to become a mummy).

In "kurukuru party", Chim Pom is reproducing and unveiling a party they have held before. An all-night drinking "takunomi" is something everyone experiences once in their lives. Wasting food may be the most luxurious thing in their unstable lives: the best joys and the most foolish horseplay could, in a way, be taken as a demonstration of the decadent elegance of today.

The plastic food samples established mainly in Japan are presumably an icon of wealth, and in this exhibition they will help revive a party once held, modeling the scars of the crazy banquet. Images of the actual party are shown on the accompanying video.

Positioned as the polar opposite to the gluttony of food and hedonism of a "kurukuru party" is "the making of sokushinbutsu," indicating starvation and "satori" - a spiritual awakening.

This project presents the very "making" of Motomu Inaoka, the handworker of Chim Pom, becoming a "sokushinbutsu" in the context of traditional craft. Inaoka himself bears a resemblance to Buddha - perhaps this is why he presents himself as a progressing sokushinbutsu, so to speak, a living sculpture. The final aim after the exhibition, after the ascetic practice, is to make a sculpture of his emaciated figure.
In Buddhism, a monk usually goes through several stages of asceticism to become a sokushinbutsu. However, in this exhibition it will be performed safely and with no threat of life, for as Chim Pom says "after all it’s only a joke."

Schedule

Jun 27 (Sat) 2009-Jul 25 (Sat) 2009 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
11:00-18:00
Fridays closing at 20:00
Closed
Monday, Sunday, Holidays

Opening Reception Jun 27 (Sat) 2009 18:00 - 20:00

FeeFree
VenueYamamoto Gendai
http://yamamotogendai.org/
Location3F Terrada Art Complex, 1-33-10 Higashi Shinagawa, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 140-0002
Access8 minute walk from Tennozu Isle Station on the Tokyo Monorail or Rinkai line. From JR Shinagawa station, take the Toei bus (towards Yashio Park Town), and get off at Tennouzubashi. The venue is 3 minute walk from there.
Phone03-6433-2988
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