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“Language, Literature and Music = Nourishment for the SOUL “that which is full of structure and repetition is predictably boring.” “that is which is full of accident and chance is randomly boring”… In Between Lies…”ART!”

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Artists: Open Call For Upcoming Shows

I'm looking for artists to show their work to the public. I have four different venues to fill. Any style or art study. Participation Fee will be required. You will be responsible for hanging your own work. Exhibit will run for thirty (30) days. If interested, please mail your mission statement, artist bio, resume and images of your wok in a cd-rom to:

Owen Geronimo
537 Jones Street PMB 3151
San Francisco, CA 94102

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Katsushige Nakahashi: The Depth of Memory

3 January - 22 March 2008, Special Reception with the Artist:
Tuesday 15 January, 5 - 8 pm

Co-sponsored by
Japan Society logo

Katsushige Nakahashi photographing the USS Missouri
Katsushige Nakahashi photographing on the deck of the
USS Missouri December 7, 2006, Honolulu, HI.
Photograph by Mike Weidenbach, Curator Battleship Missouri Memorial


On December 7, 2006, the sixty-fifth anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese artist Katsushige Nakahashi photographed, from sunrise to sunset, a portion of the USS Missouri's deck. His selection of this specific site on board the ship is charged with historical significance; during the Pacific battle of World War II a Kamikaze fighter hit this particular section of the Missouri. Composed of more than 5,000 photographs, spanning more than 40-feet, and assembled by a team of volunteers at Japan's Tottori Prefectural Museum in May 2007, On the Day 7th December, 2006 / Battleship Missouri,Pearl Harbor is layered with temporal depth that physically embodies "sculptural time," or historical time represented with physical form.

Key to Nakahashi's first Bay Area solo exhibition is the newly commissioned: Kaiten—a World War II Japanese torpedo outfitted to accommodate a lone Kamikaze pilot. In his studio this autumn, Nakahashi painstakingly photographed the entire surface of a toy model Kaiten at 1:32 scale producing more than 20,000 photographs. These images will be assembled, with Nakahashi's oversight, in Camerawork's gallery during December and January to create a 50-foot simulacrum of the infamous "suicide submarine." Nakahashi’s work can be situated within a framework of relational aesthetics and social pratice. As the photographs of the miniature are only pieces of the artwork, they are corollary to their subsequent assembly/interaction of artist and viewer/participant. It is essential to Nakahashi’s art practice that the construction of this piece be done in the gallery, during the exhibition, with as broad-ranging a cross section of volunteers as can be organized.

To learn more about how you can participate in this exhibition, please visit: http://online.sfsu.edu/~amkerner/Kaiten/VolunteerForm.html

Curated by Aaron Kerner & Chuck Mobley

This exhibition is made possible with support from the
National Endowment for the Arts, Columbia Foundation,
and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts



Admission:
(suggested donation)
$5 for general public
$2 for students and seniors
FREE for SFCW members
Open late First Thursday of each month
Free admission First Tuesday of each month



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