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Yoshiaki Kaihatsu: ART IS LIVE―Welcome to One Person Democracy at Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT)

An exhibition featuring the paradoxical keyword “One Person Democracy” is now held at the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo. You might wonder, isn’t democracy supposed to involve many people? For those of us who have lived in democratic countries since birth, how often do we stop to appreciate or think deeply about it? This exhibition, approached through art, might spark your curiosity.

An exhibition creating together with you.

The exhibition is on the third floor, but before you enter, you’ll receive a light blue bag on the second floor. They call this bag a welcome kit. Inside, there are three items you’ll need to participate in the exhibition. After you’ve explored the exhibition, return the bag and the mission card inside it, and you’ll get a “Yoshiaki Kaihatsu Exhibition Trading Card.”


At the entrance of the exhibition hall, you’ll see a board titled “Let’s use a Mission Card!” with a message from Mr. Yoshiaki Kaihatsu explaining how to enjoy the exhibition. This reminds me of Kenji Miyazawa’s story “THE RESTAURANT OF MANY ORDERS,” where you gradually feel like you’re being “stripped bare” in a fun way.

The venue is designed with great care, and it’s filled with even more opportunities for visitors to get involved. Here, “ART IS LIVE” comes to life, just as the title suggests. It’s interesting, but as we participate in different activities, we start to feel like we need to help make the exhibition a success.

What is a “One Person Democracy”?

“One Person Democracy” isn’t a phrase created by Mr. Yoshiaki Kaihatsu himself. Instead, it was used by Mr. Osamu Ikeda, the former representative of BankART, to describe Mr. Kaihatsu’s art. Because of this, there isn’t an explanation of “One Person Democracy” in the exhibition.

If you want to know more, please read the column in the booklet on the table when you return your welcome kit. The booklet is available in English, Korean, and Japanese.

Here are some words from the column that left a strong impression on me:

Democracy is not the movement organized by a group of people acting under a single motto but the chain reaction where one person’s specific action causes other people to act. In this sense, it could be said that Yoshiaki Kaihatsu’s one person democracy was genuinely derived from the essence of democracy.

After visiting the exhibition, I realized that it truly was an art experience that matched these words. Come to this exhibition and discover your own “One Person Democracy.”

The following is a quote from the press release:

Outline

Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo is pleased to present Yoshiaki Kaihatsu: ART IS LIVE―Welcome to One Person Democracy, the first major exhibition dedicated to Yoshiaki Kaihatsu (1966–) held at a museum in Tokyo. Since the beginning of his career in the 1990s, the artist has devoted himself to artistic activities that involve and provoke communication, with underlying interest in familiar events, such as everyday life and social occurrences.

The forms of expression he employs are diverse, ranging from the production of drawings, photographs, performances, and installations to everyday tasks, workshops at schools and in communities, and proposing and advocating Thank You Art Day, which designates March 9 (the pronunciation of “3 9” resembles “thank you” in Japanese) as the day to celebrate art. Among them, the ongoing projects offer us a glimpse into the philosophy behind his endeavors. Future Post Office, in which a letter you write to yourself or to your friend arrives after a year, 100 Teachers, in which classes are conducted under the slogan, “Everyone is a teacher, everyone is a student,” and Mole TV, which invites diverse guests to the underground studio, all mimic the existing formats—the postal service, education, and mass media—while suggesting an equal relationship between the message’s sender and receiver.

Dragon Chair, a workshop that started at school in Fuchu, invited children to express themselves—without worrying about what others think—through chairs, which are linked together to form a dozens-meter-long dragon. In 2011, the artist began a charity exhibition, Daylily Art Circus (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014), with his artist and personal friends. The project collected donations, traveling from Western Japan, the region struck by the Great Hanshin and Awaji Earthquake, to the areas affected by the Great East Japan Earthquake and Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant accident. His interaction with people in the disaster-stricken regions and experiences at the sites led to other projects in Fukushima, such as The House of Politicians (2012–) and Cotoba Library (Library of Words), which collects vanishing dialects. These projects, in which Kaihatsu hears individuals’ faint voices and calmly continues to do what he can do, can be described as “side-by-side activism.”

Kaihatsu’s gestures of personally intervening in social structures, systems, communities, and events have come to characterize his practice: the late Osamu Ikeda (former director of BankART1929) called it “One Person Democracy*.” “Democracy,” a term premised on everyone’s participation, may seem to contradict “one person.” However, precisely because these movements are not united, individuals can react to each other, and the reaction successively involves people and results in an action. This is where we find the core of Kaihatsu’s artistic expression.

Many of his extensive and diverse artistic activities are not intended to be in a collection or exhibited at museums, and this has limited opportunities to overview his career of over thirty years. Yoshiaki Kaihatsu: ART IS LIVE―Welcome to One Person Democracy presents about fifty pieces of works and projects by the artist, who has confronted everyday events and social changes firsthand. We welcome viewers to the world of One Person Democracy.

*Osamu Ikeda, “One Person Democracy,” KAIHATSU Yoshiaki, BankART1929, 2014

Highlights

Materials from Kaihatsu’s early career not shown anywhere else

The exhibition introduces a number of photographs, videos, and actual materials of Kaihatsu’s ambitious early-career activities, including those presented publicly for the first time, such as his guerrilla performance at Documenta 9 and 365 PROJECT, which traveled through Japan between 1995 and 1996.

A little strange Kaihatsu Town

A part of the exhibition gallery called Kaihatsu Town showcases a collection of unique facilities, such as a post office that delivers letters a year later, a bank that does not deal money, and a classroom that offers unusual classes. If you get tired, you can take a break in a faux fur park.

Live art experience

The artist is in the exhibition room every day, doing something (he can be absent occasionally). Something happens daily, and visitors can witness or participate in the events. Various activities, including 100 Teachers, which invites a hundred unique and interesting teachers to give a hundred unique classes during the exhibition, as well as talk events with collaborators from projects in Tohoku and Thank You Art Day, live performances, and workshops, are given in the exhibition room and the museum’s premise every day, creating a place for movement, transformation, meeting, and conversation.

Artist Profile

Yoshiaki Kaihatsu

Born in Yamanashi Prefecture in 1966. In 1993, Kaihatsu completed a Master’s degree in Arts at Tama Art University. He received a grant from the Asian Cultural Council and stayed in New York and Berlin, creating and presenting works. He received the 4th Taro Okamoto Award for Contemporary Art, Outstanding performance award in 2001 and participated in the 9th International Architecture Exhibition La Biennale di Venezia in 2004. He started Thank You Art Day, which designates March 9 as the day to celebrate art, and organizes Daylily Art Circus, a disaster relief activity. His recent solo exhibitions include 8th Grade Syndrome (2016, Ichihara Lakeside Museum), AREKORE KAIHATSU FACTORY (2019, The Hakone Open-Air Museum), and Kaihatsu Rediscovering, Vol. 1, 2, 3 (2019, 2022, ANOMALY), and group exhibitions include Echigo Tsumari Art Triennial (2006–), ICHIHARA ART x MIX (2014–), and Now, it’s time to play (2019, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo).

Title Yoshiaki Kaihatsu: ART IS LIVE―Welcome to One Person Democracy
Period August 3 – November 10, 2024
Venue Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, Exhibition Gallery 3F
Address 4-1-1 Miyoshi, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0022 Japan
Official Website https://www.mot-art-museum.jp/en/exhibitions/art-is-live/
Opening Hours 10 AM – 6 PM (Tickets available until 30 minutes before closing)
*Open until 9 PM on Fridays in August
Closed Mondays (except Sep. 16 and 23, Oct. 14, Nov. 4), Sep. 17 and 24, Oct. 15, Nov. 5
Online Ticket See Online Ticket website
Admission Adults – 1,500 yen
University & College Students, Over 65 – 1,100 yen
High school & Junior High School Students – 600 yen
Elementary School Students & Younger – free
Notes *20% discount for a group of over 20 people.
*Ticket includes admission to the MOT Collection exhibition.
*Persons with a Physical Disability Certificate, Intellectual Disability Certificate, Intellectual Disability Welfare Certificate, or Atomic Bomb Survivor Welfare Certificate as well as up to two attendants are admitted free of charge.[Silver Day] Those over 65 years old receive free admission on the third Wednesday of every month by presenting proof of age at the ticket counter.[Summer Night Museum 2024]
Special discount for admissions after 5 PM on August 30.
Students: Free with valid identification / Adults & over 65: 20% discount with valid identification[Students Day supported by Bloomberg]
Students can view the exhibition for free by presenting a valid ID at the museum’s ticket counter on September 7 and 8.