Exhibition/event has ended.
[image: Sam Durant "1853-1900, Map of the World, Japan Centered," (2015) Colored pencil on paper, Two parts; Left: 20 7/16 x 24 5/16 inches, Right: 22 1/2 x 30 inches Courtesy of the artist and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo]

Sam Durant “Borrowed Scenery”

Blum
Finished

Artists

Sam Durant
In his tenth solo exhibition with the gallery, Los Angeles-based artist Sam Durant continues to examine social, historical, and political issues through sculpture, installation, photography, and drawing. The works in this exhibition derive from two transformative moments in modern Japanese history — the arrival of Commodore Matthew C. Perry’s naval fleet in Edo (Tokyo) Bay in 1853 and Japan’s victory in the war with Imperial Russia in 1905. A suite of drawings and prints refers to the infamous encounter in which Commodore Perry forced Japan into negotiating a trade agreement with the United States by threatening a military attack. Perry was accompanied by William Heine, an artist who documented the encounter. Durant uses Heine’s work to symbolize the role of the artist in the political realm, the role of culture and identity in forming meaning, and his own position as an American artist making work for a Japanese audience. In three scroll prints, Durant pairs the images that Heine produced with Japanese depictions of the same scenes, offering a comparison between Japanese and American perceptions of the fateful encounter that changed both countries dramatically. Two sets of drawings, Americans and Borrowed Scenery, also mimic the scroll format but are less narrative. Americans proposes a typology of the new foreign visitors; there is both humor and foreboding present in the depictions. Three smaller drawings of historical ukiyo-e prints depict aspects of the American arrival in 1853 and the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–5. These pieces also show different mapping styles, both Japanese and European. 1850–1900, Map of the World, America and Russia portrays both American and Russian soldiers along with a map of Japan surrounded by foreign ships. It depicts a Japanese awareness of being an island nation at the crossroads of history and modernity. The diptych, 1853–1900, Map of the World, Japan Centered, pairs a Japan-centered world map with a metaphorical image of an enormous hand reaching into Japanese life and people’s reactions to this intervention, ranging from jubilance to repulsion and indifference. Another diptych, 1905, Japan Defeats Russia, Empire, refers to the first defeat of an imperial power by an Asian country since the beginning of European colonial domination. The event can be linked to the independence struggles that have been fought around the globe during the 20th century and continue into the present. This drawing pairs a shunga image of a Japanese soldier raping a Russian soldier with an English atlas map depicting the effects of the victory in the region. This example of shunga (a genre of erotic woodblock prints dating back to the 9th Century) is significant not only for its shocking metaphor of victory in war ­­— it makes plain the sexual dimension of conquest ­— but also that it signaled Japan’s own imperial desires.

Schedule

Nov 28 (Sat) 2015-Jan 16 (Sat) 2016 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
12:00-18:00
Closed
Monday, Sunday, Holidays

Opening Reception Nov 28 (Sat) 2015 00:00 - 00:00

FeeFree
Websitehttp://www.blumandpoe.com/exhibitions/sam-durant-8#press1
VenueBlum
https://blum-gallery.com/
Location5F Harajuku Jingu-no-mori, 1-14-34 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku
, Tokyo 150-0001
Access1 minute walk from the Takeshita exit of Harajuku Station on the JR Yamanote line, 2 minute walk from exit 2 at Meiji-jingumae Station on the Chiyoda and Fukutoshin lines.
Phone03-3475-1631 
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