ART CITIES: Tokyo-Ryuichi Sasamoto

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE - fluid, invisible, inaudible…, 2007/2021, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021Ryuichi Sasamoto is a New York-based artist who works in performance, sculpture, dance, and whatever medium is effective for conveying her ideas. She has collaborated with musicians, choreographers, scientists and scholars, and she plays multiple roles as performer, sculptor, or director, working across the fields of visual art and the performing arts.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo Archive

“Life Laboratory” is the first solo exhibition with works by Ryuichi Sasamoto in Japa. Sasamoto is known for designing and configuring sculptures and devices in installations, in which she stages improvisational performances using them like a score. The exhibition explores the two-decade-long interplay between sculptural creation and performance in Sasamoto’s art. From her foremost early-period works, which pose profound questions while humorously intertwining personal novel-like narratives, to her latest works emphasizing kinetic elements, it will examine artworks arising from her remarkable talent and ceaseless art practice. Ryuichi Sakamoto believed that technology is the key to remaining aware of the world in its entirety. Since the late 1970s, he has played a key role in redefining the intersection between sound and art in Japan and internationally. From his cinematic scores, for which he was awarded both an Oscar and a Grammy in 1988, and his influence on the development of electronic music through the Japanese band Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO) to his current activist work on climate change, Sakamoto continues to radically transform the way we think about creative practice and the potential of art and music. As the title of this exhibition suggests, the survey offers audiences a series of unique multi-sensory spaces that open up and describe parts of the intangible world that were imperceptible to us before, through a blend of audio and visual languages. Each gallery in the museum expands on Sakamoto’s concept of ‘installation music’, in which the artist and his collaborators have designed environments for audiences to experience sound within a physical space as an ideal means of sharing music and sound. One example is the work “Is Your Time” (2017), made in collaboration with Shiro Takatani, which incorporates a piano that was washed up on the shore after the tsunami from the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011. For Sakamoto, this piano represents the uncontrollable forces of nature that have shaped and molded our environment, including this piano, along its journey from land to sea and back to land again. Sakamoto believes that these forces, to a degree, are also contained within the vessel of this instrument, and can therefore express new sounds and tones as a result of its exposure to the natural elements and this global event. At the centre of the exhibition is the complex audio-visual installation “LIFE – fluid, invisible, inaudible…” (2007/2021), also made with Shiro Takatani, highlighting an important point of departure for the artist into the expanded territory of experiential sound spaces. The work contains two important sub-currents: the breaking of the unilateral experience of opera, here achieved through the recreating and deconstructing of Sakamoto’s 1999 opera “LIFE”. And secondly, the integration of technology, image, and nature to achieve what Sakamoto calls the ‘the interstices of sound and image’, here configured by the experience of walking through a Japanese garden. Originally commissioned in 2007 by Yamaguchi Center for Arts and Media (YCAM), with nine custom made ‘water tanks’. These tanks are suspended in the air like image clouds. Each one produces an intricate mix of sound, artificial fog, and video clips – organized by a taxonomical system – that are projected onto the floor with images from Sakamoto’s original opera. In the spring of 2017, Sakamoto released his first solo album in eight years, “async”, and with it he re-contextualized the way he wanted to both listen to and experience an album. async takes a central role in the current exhibition, highlighting the difference between ‘listening’ to an album and ‘experiencing’ it in space, as Sakamoto calls ‘installation music’. This concept of a experiential sound space, using “async” as a type of medium or point of departure, alongside collaborators such as Zakkubalan and Apichatpong Weerasethakul, is further explored in the series of “async” galleries in the exhibition: ‘async – first light’, ‘async – drowning’, and ‘async – volume’, which enable both a deeper understanding of the album and, importantly, the chance to physically ‘enter’ the music through a space designed by Sakamoto and his collaborators

 Collaboration artists: Shiro Takatani, Daito Manabe, Carsten Nicolai, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Zakkubalan, Toshio Iwai, Fujiko Nakaya

Photo: Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE – fluid, invisible, inaudible…, 2007/2021, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021

Info: Curator: Sachiko Namba, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, 4 Chome-1-1 Miyoshi, Koto City, Tokyo, Japan, Duration: 21/12/2024-30/3/2025, Days & Hours: Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00, www.mot-art-museum.jp/

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE–fluid, invisible, inaudible..., 2007/2023, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE–fluid, invisible, inaudible…, 2007/2023, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE–fluid, invisible, inaudible..., 2007/2023, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, LIFE–fluid, invisible, inaudible…, 2007/2023, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, water state 1, 2013, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, water state 1, 2013, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, async–immersion 2023, 2023, installation view of “AMBIENT KYOTO 2023”, Kyoto Shimbun Building B1 floor, 2023. Photo by Satoshi Nagare
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, async–immersion 2023, 2023, installation view of “AMBIENT KYOTO 2023”, Kyoto Shimbun Building B1 floor, 2023. Photo by Satoshi Nagare

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Zakkubalan, async–volume, 2017, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Zakkubalan, async–volume, 2017, installation view of “Ryuichi Sakamoto | SOUND AND TIME” at M WOODS (People’s park), Chengdu, 2023 Image courtesy of M WOODS

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, water state 1, 2013, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, water state 1, 2013, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021

 

 

Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, async – drowning, 2017, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021
Ryuichi Sakamoto + Shiro Takatani, async – drowning, 2017, installation view of “seeing sound, hearing time” at M WOODS HUTONG, Beijing, 2021