VR-G

Joan Jonas | Five Rooms For Kyoto: 1972–2019

Over the course of her long and groundbreaking artistic career, Joan Jonas has explored a multimedia practice across performance, video, installation, and more. Adapting her themes according to the times, she has continued to create layered and poetic work. Even now at the age of 83, she shows no signs of slowing down in her endeavor to push the boundaries of artistic expression.

After studying sculpture and art history at university, Joan Jonas started to create performance art. On a visit to Japan in 1970, she watched Noh and Kabuki, whose incredibly accomplished and advanced visual language left a strong impression on her. Both this experience as well as the Sony Portapak video camera that she purchased during the trip led to a major shift in her later practice. Upon returning to New York, she hooked up the camera she had bought to a monitor, turning it into a de facto mirror and in front of which she then did an improvised performance that she recorded. Jonas subsequently developed this first video tape recording into Organic Honey’s Visual Telepathy (1972), a groundbreaking performance in which the viewer simultaneously watches Jonas’s actions live, on a monitor, and projected.

This exhibition traces Jonas’s remarkable achievements from 1972 to the present across five especially arranged spaces. Alongside the artist’s major installation pieces of the 2000s like Reanimation, which was staged as a performance at ROHM Theatre Kyoto on December 12th, 2019, and Lines in the Sand, her early video art, and her most recent work, Moving off the Land II, the exhibition draws on the venue’s role as a university institution to focus also on Jonas’s contributions as an educator by introducing important academic materials, including those shown publicly for the first time.

In closing, we would like to express our gratitude to the Joan Jonas Studio, ROHM Theatre Kyoto, Gavin Brown’s enterprise, and Wako Works of Art for their support in organizing this exhibition.

(Quoted from Kyoto City University of Arts Art Gallery @KCUA website.)