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Mono-ha
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Mono-ha (もの派) is the name given to an art movement led by Japanese and Korean artists of the 20th century. The Mono-ha artists explored the encounter between natural and industrial materials, such as stone, steel plates, glass, light bulbs, cotton, sponge, paper, wood, wire, rope, leather, oil, and water, arranging them in mostly unaltered, ephemeral states. The works focus as much on the interdependency of these various elements and the surrounding space as on the materials themselves.
Origin of the Term “Mono-ha” and its Members
[edit]“Mono-ha” is usually translated in a literal manner, as “School of Things.” The Mono-ha artists regularly assert that “Mono-ha” was a term disparagingly coined by critics (specifically Teruo Fujieda[1] and Toshiaki Minemura[2] in Bijutsu Techo magazine in 1973) well after they had begun to exhibit their work, and they did not begin as an organized collective. The artists' writings and conversations were published before critics coined the term, including the seminal article by Lee “World and structure—Collapse of the object [Thoughts on Contemporary Art]" in 1969[3] and the noteworthy artists' round table "Voices of emerging artists: From the realm of Non-Art"[4] published in 1970. Many of the Mono-ha artists were first exhibited at Tamura and Maki Galleries in Tokyo owned by Nobuo(Shinro) Yamagiishi who was also an art writer and whose archives are in the collection of The National Art Center Tokyo.
Toshiaki Minemura explains in his 1986 essay “What Was Mono-ha?,” that in terms of their academic background and intellectual exchange, the Mono-ha artists are divided into three groups:[5]
- "The Lee + Tamabi Connection.” This comprises Nobuo Sekine, Kishio Suga, Shingo Honda, Katsuhiko Narita and Katsurō Yoshida in the painting department in Yoshishige Saitō's class, and Susumu Koshimizu in the sculpture department at Tama Art University (aka Tamabi) as well as Jiro Takamatsu and Lee Ufan, a Korean artist who is a close friend of Sekine.
- “The Geidai Connection,” a group of artists around Kōji Enokura and Noboru Takayama, who were both graduates of the Tokyo University of the Arts (aka Geidai), and Hiroshi Fujii and Makoto Habu, who were involved in Mono-ha later on.
- “The Nichidai Connection,” students from the Nihon University (aka Nichidai) Fine Arts Department—whose central figure was Noriyuki Haraguchi—also known as the “Yokosuka Group,” due to Haraguchi’s upbringing in Yokosuka and his critique of the local US military presence through his work.[6]
Socio-Political Context
[edit]Mono-ha emerged in response to a number of social, cultural and political precedents set in the 1960s. With the exception of Lee Ufan, who was a decade older, most of the Mono-ha artists were just beginning their careers when the violent student protests of 1968–69 occurred.
At the same time, there was much protest against the second extension of the US-Japan Security Treaty (known in abbreviated Japanese as Anpo) in 1970, binding Japan into providing logistical support for the US war in Vietnam. Coupled with demands for the reversion of Okinawa by 1972 and the removal of nuclear weapons based there, the climate of protest during this period was symptomatic of a growing distrust of the United States’ intentions towards Asia and its dominant position in the bilateral relationship with Japan. The activism of the “Anpo generation” gave rise to a highly intellectual counterculture that was both critical of US imperialism and acutely self-aware of its Japanese identity.[7]
The Mono-ha artists typically deny involvement with student activist movements at the time, though it is thought that the tense political climate influenced their work, allowing them to grapple with and make sense of their unease and disillusionment with postwar modernity in their different ways.
Recent Attention in the United States
[edit]In 2012, Blum & Poe gallery introduced the Mono-ha art into the US with the survey exhibition “Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono-ha,” curated by Mika Yoshitake. The gallery has also held solo exhibitions of Lee Ufan, Kishio Suga, Susumu Koshimizu, Koji Enokura, and Nobuo Sekine.
Phase-Mother Earth
[edit]| Phase-Mother Earth | |
|---|---|
| Artist | Nobuo Sekine |
| Year | 1968, 2008 and 2012 |
| Type | earth art |
| Dimensions | 2.7 m × 2.2 m (110 in × 87 in); 2.2 m diameter (87 in) |
| Location | Kobe, Suma Rikyu Park |
Nobuo Sekine's Phase-Mother Earth is considered to be the initial work of the Mono-ha movement.[8] Originally created in Suma Rikyu Park in Kobe, and without official permission. The work was re-created in 2008[9] and 2012. It was a large cylindrical tower made of packed earth, which was removed from a cylindrical hole with the same shape.
Members
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Japon des avant gardes: 1910–1970. Paris: Centre Georges Pompidou, 1986.
- Chong, Doryun. Tokyo 1955–1970: A New Avant-Garde. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2012.
- Koplos, Janet. Contemporary Japanese Sculpture. New York: Abbeville Press, 1991.
- Munroe, Alexandra. Japanese Art After 1945: Scream Against the Sky. New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc, 1994.
- Yoshitake, Mika. Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono-ha. Los Angeles: Blum & Poe, 2012.
- Kishio Suga. Los Angeles: Blum & Poe, 2012
References
[edit]- ^ “Monoha no sakugo” (Mono-ha’s Mistake), Bijutsu techō (March 1973), pp. 8-11
- ^ “<Kurikaeshi> to <Shisutemu> –"Mono-ha" igo no moraru” (‘Repetition’ and ‘System’—The Moral after ‘Mono-ha’), Bijutsu techō, no. 375 (December 1973), pp. 170–175
- ^ Lee, “Sekai to kōzō: Taishō no gakai (gendai bijutsu ronkō)” (World and structure—Collapse of the object [Thoughts on Contemporary Art]), Dezain hihyō, no. 9 (June 1969)
- ^ “Hatsugen suru shinjintachi - Higeijutsu no chihei kara” (Voices of emerging artists: From the realm of Non-Art), Bijutsu techō 22, no. 324 (February 1970): 12–53
- ^ Minemura, Toshiaki. "What was MONO-HA?", MONO-HA, Kamakura Gallery, 1986, p.6
- ^ Kishio Suga. Los Angeles: Blum & Poe, 2012, p.8
- ^ Munroe, Alexandra. Japanese Art After 1945: Scream Against the Sky. Harry N. Abrams Inc, 1994. p.215
- ^ "Series: 1000 artworks to see before you die". The Guardian. 30 October 2008. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
- ^ Rawlings, Ashley (2008). "Nobuo Sekine's "Phase-Mother Earth" Under Reconstruction". Art Space Tokyo (October 28). Retrieved 31 July 2011.
Mono-ha
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Etymology and Initial Recognition
![Nobuo Sekine's Phase—Mother Earth, 1968][float-right] The term "Mono-ha" derives from Japanese words "mono," meaning "things" or "objects," and "ha," denoting a school, faction, or poetic style, thus literally translating to "School of Things."[3][1] It was not self-chosen by the artists but coined externally, often pejoratively, by critics to describe their approach of minimal intervention with natural and industrial materials, critiquing the perceived absence of traditional craftsmanship and polish.[1][13] The label emerged in art criticism around 1973, applied retroactively to activities from the mid-1960s, reflecting a dismissive view of the group's focus on material encounter over artistic fabrication.[13][14] Initial recognition of the ideas associated with Mono-ha occurred in the late 1960s through provocative installations that gained attention in Tokyo's art scene. A seminal event was Nobuo Sekine's Phase—Mother Earth in October 1968, displayed at the 2nd Contemporary Art Exhibition of Japan in Kobe, where a cylindrical hole was excavated in the ground and the extracted earth molded into a complementary form, emphasizing spatial and material juxtaposition without alteration.[2] This work, involving approximately 2.2 cubic meters of earth, challenged modernist sculpture norms and drew critical notice for its site-specific, non-fabricated nature.[2] Subsequent group activities, such as the 1970 formation of Ba-Sō-Ji (Place-Phase-Seed) by artists including Sekine, Lee Ufan, and Kishio Suga, further solidified early visibility through exhibitions prioritizing raw material presentations over conventional artistry.[14][15] Though the precise term "Mono-ha" crystallized later, these 1960s endeavors marked the movement's emergence as a distinct response to post-war artistic paradigms.[16]Early Formative Events (1960s)
The Mono-ha movement's practices crystallized in the late 1960s amid Japan's post-war artistic experimentation, with Nobuo Sekine's Phase—Mother Earth (1968) serving as a seminal event. Created for the inaugural Suma Rikyu Park Contemporary Sculpture Exhibition in Kobe on October 18, 1968, the work consisted of a cylindrical excavation in the earth measuring approximately 2.2 meters in diameter and depth, with the displaced soil meticulously compacted into an identical cylindrical form adjacent to the void.[17] This intervention highlighted the inherent properties of soil and site without artificial fabrication, challenging viewers to confront the material's existential presence.[18] Sekine's installation unexpectedly persisted beyond the exhibition's duration, as the soil cylinder remained intact through weathering, underscoring the movement's emphasis on natural processes over human control.[11] This durability and the work's minimal manipulation of found materials influenced subsequent artists, including Lee Ufan, who arrived in Japan from Korea in 1956 and began articulating theoretical foundations for such approaches in the late 1960s.[19] Ufan's writings, such as those critiquing modernist interventionism, drew from phenomenological ideas and helped frame Sekine's experiment as a rejection of anthropocentric art-making.[20] Early associations formed loosely around galleries like Tamura and Maki in Tokyo, where Sekine and peers such as Yoshitake Shikama exhibited works exploring material encounters by 1968.[21] These displays, often using stone, steel, and earth, echoed the Kobe event's principles and laid groundwork for Mono-ha's non-interventionist ethos, distinct from concurrent avant-garde actions like Hi Red Center's performances earlier in the decade.[22] By late 1968, this shift toward "things" as autonomous entities marked a formative pivot from fabrication-heavy modernism.[1]Historical Context
Post-War Socio-Economic Conditions in Japan
Following Japan's surrender on September 2, 1945, the country faced severe economic devastation, including widespread destruction of infrastructure, hyperinflation, food shortages, and a national debt exceeding 200% of GDP, which hindered immediate recovery efforts.[23] Under the Allied occupation from 1945 to 1952, led by the U.S., reforms such as land redistribution benefiting tenant farmers, dissolution of zaibatsu conglomerates, and democratization measures laid the groundwork for stabilization, though initial hyperinflation persisted until fiscal austerity measures like the Dodge Line in 1949 curbed it.[23] The Korean War (1950–1953) provided an unexpected procurement boom, injecting demand for Japanese exports and accelerating industrial reactivation, with special procurement orders totaling around $2.2 billion by 1953.[24] By 1952, Japan had regained its prewar industrial output levels, marking the end of occupation and the onset of sovereign economic policy-making under the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI).[25] The period from the mid-1950s to 1973, known as the high-growth era, saw average annual real GDP growth of approximately 9–10%, driven by export-oriented industrialization, high investment rates (often exceeding 30% of GDP), and policies like the 1960 Income Doubling Plan, which prioritized heavy industries such as steel, chemicals, and automobiles.[26] Per capita income surpassed prewar levels by 1953, and GNP multiplied 2.5 times in constant prices during the 1950s alone, transforming Japan into the world's third-largest economy by the late 1960s with a burgeoning middle class comprising over 90% of households by consumer durables ownership standards.[27] Socio-economic shifts included rapid urbanization, as rural populations migrated to cities for factory jobs, increasing the urban share from about 37% in 1950 to roughly 72% by 1970, exacerbating issues like housing shortages and infrastructure strain.[28] A declining birth rate from 34.3 per 1,000 in 1947 to 17.2 by 1973 stabilized population growth while enabling a demographic dividend through a youthful workforce, though this fueled labor-intensive expansion at the cost of rising pollution—evident in incidents like the 1968 Yokkaichi asthma cases linked to industrial emissions—and urban congestion.[25] Social unrest peaked in the 1960 Anpo protests, where millions demonstrated against the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty renewal, reflecting tensions over remilitarization, economic dependence on the U.S., and perceived erosion of pacifism under Article 9 of the 1947 Constitution, culminating in over 5.8 million participants and one death during clashes in June 1960.[29][30] These conditions underscored a duality of prosperity and critique, with strong unions securing wage hikes averaging 10% annually in the 1960s, yet growing awareness of environmental and social costs amid unchecked modernization.[28]Intellectual and Philosophical Influences
The intellectual foundations of Mono-ha were primarily articulated by Lee Ufan, who drew on Western continental philosophy, including the works of Martin Heidegger, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Rainer Maria Rilke, to emphasize the intrinsic existence and relationality of objects independent of human fabrication.[31] Ufan, trained in philosophy during his time in Japan, integrated Heidegger's notions of Dasein and the "thing" as revealing being-in-the-world, adapting them to critique anthropocentric intervention in art and advocate for direct perceptual encounters with materials.[32] This phenomenological orientation, blending structuralist analysis of perception with existential themes, positioned Mono-ha as a response to postwar modernist excesses, prioritizing the object's autonomy over artistic imposition.[33] Complementing these Western imports, Mono-ha artists engaged with East Asian philosophical traditions, particularly those rooted in Japanese aesthetics and the Kyoto School of philosophy, such as Nishida Kitarō's concepts of basho (place) and pure experience, which underscore the dynamic interplay between subject and object without dualistic separation.[34] This influence manifested in a return to pre-modern sensibilities, echoing mono no aware—the pathos of things—and principles of impermanence and materiality akin to those in Zen-influenced arts, though Ufan explicitly framed Mono-ha as transcending traditional Japanese forms to address universal perceptual realities.[6] The movement's ideologues sought to synthesize these strands, challenging the dominance of Western rationalism in postwar Japanese art by foregrounding existential immediacy and material contingency.[35] Ufan's writings, such as those theorizing the "art of encounter," formalized this hybrid approach, arguing that true artistic expression arises from minimal interference, allowing materials to disclose their inherent structures and temporal flux—a position informed by both Heideggerian ontology and Eastern non-dualism, yet grounded in empirical observation of natural and industrial phenomena.[36] This framework distinguished Mono-ha from contemporaneous Western minimalism by embedding philosophical inquiry in cultural critique, reflecting Japan's selective assimilation of global ideas amid rapid industrialization.[37]Core Principles
Emphasis on Material Encounter and Existence
Mono-ha's core principle centered on facilitating unmediated perceptual encounters between materials and observers, prioritizing the autonomous existence of objects over artistic imposition. Practitioners juxtaposed unaltered natural substances, such as earth, stone, or wood, with industrial artifacts like steel plates, glass, or rubber, employing minimal arrangements to elicit the materials' inherent properties—weight, texture, volume, and relational dynamics—without fabrication or representational intent.[1] This approach rejected modernist notions of creation, instead revealing phenomena through suspension and adjacency, as in pairings that highlighted contrasts in density or form to underscore mutual interdependence.[15] The movement's theorists, notably Lee Ufan, framed these encounters as a means to dissolve subject-object dualisms, presenting "things" (mono) in their essential, pre-interpreted states to provoke direct sensory engagement with reality's fabric.[38] Ufan's writings emphasized the artist's passive role as a "re-presenter," avoiding intervention to allow materials' existential autonomy to emerge, thereby fostering viewer awareness of the world's unaltered presence.[39] For instance, works often balanced precarious equilibria, such as stone atop steel, to manifest gravitational and spatial tensions innately, bypassing narrative or symbolic overlays.[40] This material-centric ontology extended to critiquing anthropocentric dominance, positioning existence as relational and emergent from encounters rather than isolated essences. Artists like Kishio Suga instantiated this by assembling found elements—cotton, sponge, or light bulbs alongside stone—to expose formal affinities and existential contingencies, compelling observers to confront the immediacy of matter's self-disclosure.[41] Such practices aligned with broader Mono-ha aims of minimal disruption, where the artwork's site-specificity amplified materials' temporal flux, from stability to potential decay, affirming their independent agency.[42]Critique of Modernist Fabrication and Intervention
Mono-ha artists critiqued modernist fabrication as an anthropocentric imposition of subjective form on materials, resulting in autonomous objects detached from their inherent existence and site-specific contexts. This tradition, exemplified in Western sculpture's emphasis on creation (sōzō) and production processes like carving or casting, was viewed as artificial objectification that prioritizes the artist's will over materials' relational essence.[14] Lee Ufan, a central theorist, framed "not making" as a direct protest against modern "making," rejecting completion and production in favor of acts of mediation that facilitate encounters between things.[14] In this view, excessive intervention obscures the world's perceptual horizon, turning materials into static objets rather than dynamic passages revealing their properties through juxtaposition.[43] Mono-ha practices employed minimal gestures—such as positioning natural and industrial elements—to transcend subject-object dualism, emphasizing sincerity toward materials without twisting their meaning.[14] Nobuo Sekine's Phase—Mother Earth (1968), consisting of a 2.2-meter-diameter, 2.7-meter-deep cylindrical excavation with the displaced earth formed into an equivalent mound, embodied this critique by adding and subtracting nothing, achieving phenomenological reduction where earth "becomes more earth."[14] Such works challenged modernist sculpture's fabrication of separate forms, instead demonstrating continuity between site, material, and viewer to expose existence unmediated by representation.[43] This approach extended to other artists, like Susumu Koshimizu, who avoided manipulation to preserve materials' essential state, positioning Mono-ha as a rejection of modernism's systems of power rooted in willful creation.[14]
