オペラシティ 

Teppei Soutome, Koki Tanaka, Satoshi Hashimoto, Hiroaki Morita : Why not live for Art? II – 9 collectors reveal their treasures

Saturday, 13 July – Sunday, 23 September, 2013

Venue:
Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery
Open hours:
11:00 – 19:00 (to 20:00 on Fridays and Saturdays, entry up to 30 minutes before closing)
Closed on Mondays (Tuesday if the Monday is a public holiday), 4 August
Admission:
adult 1,000 [800] yen, university and high school students 800 [600] yen, junior high and elementary school students 600 [400] yen

http://www.operacity.jp/ag/exh154/

Sorry, this entry is only available in Japanese.

Koki Tanaka, Hiroaki Morita : MOT Annual 2012 Making Situations, Editing Landscapes

10.27.2012 – 2.3.2013

Dates:Oct.27(Sat.) 2012-Feb.3(Sun.) 2013

Location:Museum of contemporary Art, Tokyo Exhibition Gallery 3F

Participating artists:Koki Tanaka, Hiroaki Morita.

For more information:http://www.mot-art-museum.jp/exhibition/140.html#info

art_product_iv_01

 

Hirofumi Isoya, Hiroaki Morita : ART & PRODUCT (AI KOWADA GALLERY : Tokyo)

 

11.12 – 12.22. 2011

 

curated by HAKUHODO ART PROJECT

AI KOWADA GALLERY / Tokyo

http://www.aikowadagallery.com/

 

Artists :
Hirofumi Isoya
Hideaki Ota
Shougo Kishino
Yoshihiko Satoh
Yasuhiro Suzuki
Takayoshi Tsuchiya
Motohiro Tomii
Takashi Homma
Midori Mitamura
Hiroaki Morita

Today, we are surrounded by overflowing amount of various products. These mass-products seem like an extreme opposite of what we usually call “Art”.
However, the production and distribution of these products are the fundamental base of our economy and society, and including their advertisements, they influence us in many ways. Artists are no exception. They too live in and are influenced by the world of mass-products and mass-consumption. From Marcel Duchamp, Andy Worhol to many artists today, artists are often inspired and given hints by products surrounding them. Through having a close look at such works produced by modern artists, this exhibition aim to offer new suggestions and inspirations to our relation with mass-products and also to the way of expressions in art using those products.
It was once said that advertisements are love letters from companies to customers. While the meaning of advertisement is undergoing change in the rapid shift of media environment, it can be said that this exhibition is an answer to the love letters, from the artists who are consumers themselves, to the companies and the society.

 

 

art_product_iv_02

ex_morita

Hiroaki Morita : TIMEQUAKE

 

8 Jan – 5 Feb 2011

 

Best wishes for the New Year 2011

 

date: 8 Jan – 5 Feb 2011

opening party: 8 Jan 2011 19:00-21:00

opening hours:
Mon. to Sat. 11:00-20:00

closed on Sun., and National holidays. 

venue: Aoyama Meguro
2-30-6 Kamimeguro Meguroku Tokyo Japan 153-0051 

 

Continuing from where his 2009 solo show “Local Earthquake” at Kabegiwa left, this exhibition by Hiroaki Morita features works that make use of earthquakes and related phenomena, including an installation of 24 fluorescent light tubes hanging from the ceiling.

Installation view, TIMEQUAKE

Hiroaki Morita : Happiness in Everyday Life

Oct. 25 (Sat) to Jan. 18, 2009 (Sun)

 

Contemporary Art Center, Art Tower Mito

1-6-8 Goken-cho, Mito-shi, Ibaraki 310-0063 JAPAN

Tel. (+81)-(0)29-227-8111 / Fax. (+81)-(0)29-227-8110 / webstaff@arttowermito.or.jp

 

Participating Artists: Yuusuke Asai, Atelier Bow-Wow, Guy Ben-Ner, Marco Bohr, Hiroshi Fuji, Katsuhiko Hibino, Takahiro Iwasaki, Satoshi Kamiya, KOSUGE1-16, Tatsuo Miyajima, Hiroaki Morita, Yoshinari Nishio, Shinji Ohmaki, Kayo Ume



morita

 “Clockwise” (2005-2008) Dimensions variable

 

Hiroaki Morita : Clockwise

5.30 – 6.28. 2008

 

Hiroaki Morita was born in 1973 and completed the graduate program at Goldsmiths College in Britain in 2002. He currently resides in Tokyo, where he works on creating his art.

Ever since his school years, Morita has been creating minimal sculptures, adding just a bit of modification to his materials. For example, he created a sculpture by putting Pepsi into a Coca Cola bottle, a performance in which he replaced Evian water with Volvic, and sculpture composed of a slowly rotating circular mirror — all of these works are driven by nonsensical and yet very charming and original ideas.

In this exhibition new works are on display, including the animation “Clockwise,” in which everyday items are used to count 24 hours, as well as a kinetic piece consisting of two bent wooden screws, and intricate collages of landscapes and buildings. As the exhibition title implies, Morita plays along with standard time, experimenting with the notion of time by stopping and sometimes expanding it.

Morita is definitely one of the emerging artists to watch out for. His work was featured in the “New Tokyo Contemporaries” exhibition held in Marunouchi earlier this year, and will also be included in a group show at the Mito Art Tower this year.

 

1375707303_6665-cw249

AD99-620