Echo: The Poetics of Translation
I am participating in a symposium that will investigate the topic of “environment” from the perspectives of four artists. Please come join this opportunity to discuss nature up to and including our urban environment. My presentation will include the memory of dirt in historical layers that are crucial to the series “Philosophies of Dirt”. There will also be a newly created installation of four dirt pigments created specifically for this event along with the work on paper from this series.
TIEAF2013 – Tokyo International Environmental Art Forum –
東京国際環境アートフォーラム
会場 駐日韓国大使館 韓国文化院 ギャラリーMI 〒160-0004 東京都新宿区四谷4-4-10
< Location > The gallery MI at Korean cultural center of the Embassy of Korea
4-4-10, Yotsuya, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan 160-0004
イベント Event
*シンポジウム 8月6日(火)16:30〜 モデレーター: 椿玲子(森美術館アソシエイトキュレーター)Symposium: August 6 16:30- Moderator : Reiko Tsubaki
参加アーティストによるシンポジウムを開催。環境アートについて各国のアーティストが意見をかわします。*オープニングレセプション 8月6日(火)18:00- Opening reception: August 6
アーティスト
James Jack / ジェームス ジャック (USA)
Chul Ho Lee / チョルホ イ
Chanil Hong / チャンイル ホン
Sang Chul Jun / サンチョル ユン
Hoseob Yoon / ホソッブ ユン
Kwang Woo Kim / グァンウ キム
Sung Ra Kim / サンラ キム
Shotaro Yoshino / 吉野祥太郎
Shoko Miki / 三木祥子
Yoshitaka Nanjo / 南条嘉毅
Hitomi Iwano / 岩野仁美
Ushio Sakusabe / サクサベウシオ
Kouseki Ono / 小野耕石
Eva Högberg / エヴァ ホグベリ (Sweden)
Bill Wolff / ビル ウォルフ (USA)
Frédéric Houvert / フレデリック ウーヴェル (France)
Billy Styles / ビリー スタイルズ (UK)
Christophe Charles +Kazue Kaku / クリストフ シャルル+郭一恵 (France + Korea)
I am also creating a new artwork in Singapore as part of the project “ECHO: The Poetics of Translation” a theme conceptualized by Charles Merewether for Tropical Lab 7. This experimental work I am developing is based on the social landscape of Singapore and will open on the same day August 6th at LASALLE University. For more information see this LINK and for current updates on the project see HERE.
After an intensive week of workshops, seminars, research trips and other related activities, Tropical Lab culminates in an an exhibition of works by the participating artists. The 2013 exhibition will be curated by Milenko Prvacki, Senior Fellow at LASALLE College of the Arts. The Tropical Lab Exhibition will be open for public viewing from 7 to 14 August 2013, from 10am to 6pm, Tuesday to Sunday (except 12pm to 1pm) at ICA Gallery 2, PRAXIS Space, Project Space, Earl Lu Gallery and Brother Joseph McNally Gallery at LASALLE College of The Arts, 1 McNally Street.
Video document HERE
EVERYONE IS INVITED
TROPICAL LAB 7 – ECHO : The Poetics of Translation
Opening: Tuesday, 6 August 2013
Guest of Honour: Prof. Steve Dixon, President, LASALLE College of the Arts
Venue: ICA Gallery 2, PRAXIS Space, Project Space, Earl Lu Gallery and Brother Joseph McNally Gallery LASALLE College of the Arts, 1 McNally Street, Singapore
Exhibition Period: Wed 7 – Wed 14 Aug 2013
Gallery Hours: 10am – 6pm (closed on Mondays and public holidays)
Admission: Free
Participating Artists:
James Jack- Tokyo University of the Arts, Japan
Lisa Frankland – RMIT, Australia
Danny Liu – RMIT, Hong Kong
Wahyu Utami Wati – Indonesia Institute of the Arts, Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Ahmad Nursalim – Bandung Institute Of Technology, Indonesia
Chika Takagi & Koharu Kimata – Nagoya University of Arts and Sciences, Japan
Kayla Ward – Massey University, New Zealand
Bridget Tay & Pheng Guan – LASALLE College of the Arts, Singapore
Helena Hernández Tapia & Lucas Guidetti Perez – Lucerne School of Art and Design, Switzerland
Lucile Dupraz &Kyung Min Roh Bannwart – Ecole d’art de Lausanne, Switzerland
Rattana Salee – Silpakorn University, Thailand
Zeynep Ozel – Sabanci University, Turkey
Isaac Whitcombe & Guy Blundel – Winchester School of Art, University of Southampton, UK
Joshua David Y’Barbo – Chelsea College of Art, UK
Gabriel Stones – Royal Academy, UK
Jim Edward Threapleton – Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London, UK
Damien O’Connell – Central St. Martins, University of the Arts London, UK
Karen Pearson – University of Plymouth, UK
Kambui Olujimi & Alexandra Van – Columbia University, USA
Bridget Batch & Leander Schwazer – California Institute of the Arts, USA




Main exhibition installation views at Satoshi Koyama Gallery. April 12 – May 18, 2013



wall and his blue lights. Once we realized that we had a mutual friend, artist Shingo Honda, there was a natural affinity in our approaches even though our artworks couldn’t look more distinct on the surface.
Philosophy of Dirt is a series of works on paper composed with natural soil pigment completed over the past seven years by James Jack. The poet Brandon Shimoda writes, “His is a process of storytelling as critical engagement, with the artworks manifest as both living testimonial and decisive artifact. With Philosophies of Dirt, contingent sites become models of deep thought, exemplifying Jack’s art as an act of generously unfolding witness and reclamation.”


While listening to the local people’s memories of drinking parties, tea gatherings and many breaks from work that took place at this clubhouse I realized the significance of my work in this specific place at this particular time. No different from most of the islands in Setouchi and the Japanese countryside in general, the population on Shodo Island is decreasing. For school, work, convenience and many other reasons young people are leaving the countryside for urban lifestyles and fewer and fewer couples are having babies. Towns such as Kounoura where I am undertaking this artwork show the signs of decreasing population very clearly. In some areas there are more empty houses than those being lived in and it is easier to find a car with an elderly sticker than one without. In the midst of this complex social history of the place I had to find a way to incorporate the memories, wishes and dreams of these people directly into my art installation.



I will be the Orvis Artist in Residence at the Honolulu Academy of Art starting this Saturday, May 14th. This work will be made specifically for the Academy utilizing locally available natural materials. Natural pigment samples will be sculpted into handmade conical shapes in collaboration with museum visitors on Saturdays from 10-4:30 and Sundays from 1-4pm. These cones will collectively form a miniature landscape that will be displayed outdoors in the Banyan courtyard. The cone-making process will be demonstrated in Gallery 30 and the public is invited to sculpt cones that will be a part of the outdoor installation. The goal of this work is to revitalize people’s connection to the land we live on, revealing the wealth and diversity of the soil via a site-determined installation. The work will slowly unfold over the course of my residency period from May 14- June 25th, 2011. Please come by and participate! More information can be found on the Academy’s website by clicking