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Mixed Media: The Art of Shinro Ohtake
Jeffrey Ian Rosen
Shinro Ohtake 1 Shinro Ohtake 2
Black Shiden-Kai, 1964
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo
Mr. Peanut, 1978-81
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo
The work of Shinro Ohtake presents the writer with quite a challenge, particularly as presented in Zen-kei, the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo (MOT) retrospective on view through December 24, 2006. Ohtake, born in Tokyo in 1955 and presently living and working in the city of Uwajima, is widely celebrated as an insider's artist, one whose wider art world appreciation is in direct proportional contrast to the scale and breadth of his seemingly endless art production. Taking over nearly the entire space of the MOT, the three-story exhibition spills out into the museum lobby, where a deceptive calm is achieved as gentle, Hawaiian-sounding music plays soothingly from "Zero-Kei," a mixed-media sculpture dating from 1991-1999. The extended period of time during which this sculpture was created -- eight years -- may serve as a symbol for the artist and his extreme working method, which consists of process made public.

The unusual degree to which Ohtake attempts to equalize the reception of various elements of his work is made clear at the exhibition's "starting point" where a series of pieces, executed by Ohtake as a child ("Black Shiden-Kai" dates from 1964, created when the artist was a mere nine years old) is displayed in the same manner as "mature" works featured later in the exhibition. In fact, Ohtake refuses to allow the viewer to perceive these early works as first, as the exhibition truly begins with the presentation of a three-part work of which the centerpiece is "Time Strata" (2006), a massive framed collage that includes images from the various styles and source materials that have informed the artist's work and continue to do so into the present day. The exhibition begins with a directionless map, forcing the viewer to interpret rather than follow.

Herein lies the challenge of Ohtake. Zen-kei, and Ohtake's work in general, virtually forces a suspension of judgment upon the viewer. Faced with such volume of production, presented in a mind-scrambling variety of styles, shapes, sizes and sounds, one is tempted to set criticality aside and enjoy the sensation of being overcome by the sheer diversity of all that is experienced. To some extent, this would seem to be Ohtake's point -- though also likely the reason behind his failure, until now, to hold wide attention within the contemporary art world. Much has recently been written in praise of the artist of Zen-kei, with his work and methods acknowledged and praised for an apparent adherence to a now-forgotten art orthodoxy in which the artist is understood as creator. Such praise, however, while well-intentioned, fails to acknowledge what makes Ohtake's practice of continued relevance. Ohtake is self-consciously not a thinking artist. In this, he has much in common with a segment of present-day contemporary artists whose work is neither expressive nor consciously aimed at doing "anything." At the heart of such practice lies a void, and Ohtake's attempt to include everything -- hence the exhibition title, which translates as full view -- situates his work clearly in the present, not just as an influence but as an aesthetic alternative.

Shinro Ohtake 3 Shinro Ohtake 4
Shinro Ohtake 5
above left: Rubbish Men, 1987
Mixed-media, 405 x 405 x 20 cm
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo

above right: ZYAPANORAMA/TÔKYÔ, 1997
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo
Photo by Masataka Nakano

left: Dub-Hei and New Chanel, Stage, 1999
Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo
Photo by Masataka Nakano

Shinro Ohtake Zen-kei: Retrospective 1955-2006
Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo / http://www.mot-art-museum.jp/english/
14 October - 24 December 2006
Shinro Ohtake Exhibition: Tabi-Kei
Base Gallery / http://www.basegallery.com/index2-e.html
25 September - 25 December 2006