The Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo presents Sol LeWitt: Open Structure, the first major public retrospective in Japan dedicated to the American pioneer of Minimalism and Conceptual Art. Curated by Ai Kusumoto in collaboration with the LeWitt Estate, the exhibition brings together wall drawings, modular sculptures, works on paper, and artist’s books, offering a comprehensive overview of the ideas and methods of an artist who redefined the very notion of creation. Born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1928, Sol LeWitt revolutionized the traditional concept of art by shifting attention from gesture to idea, from the finished object to the process. His celebrated wall drawings were executed by assistants following written instructions, while his geometric “structures” expressed a logical rigor that transformed form into visible thought. The artist became not the maker, but the conceiver. The title Open Structure reflects LeWitt’s conception of art as an open, modular system: each form reveals its own method of construction, each rule generates potentially infinite variations. The exhibition features key works such as Incomplete Open Cube (1974) and Structure (One, Two, Three, Four, Five as a Square) (1978-1980), alongside six new wall drawings created specifically for Tokyo, allowing visitors to witness the transformation of concept into image. Open Structure is more than a retrospective: it is a meditation on the nature of conceptual art and the relationship between idea, form, and execution. In the Japanese context, where the dialogue between rule and freedom is a recurring aesthetic theme, LeWitt’s work finds a particular resonance. The exhibition invites reflection on how art can exist independently of the artist, and how seriality and delegated execution can become tools of freedom rather than distance.
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At the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo a show investigating world origins and the unseen through art, space science and quantum research, featuring immersive installations and the first Japanese quantum computer artwork.
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The National Art Center in Tokyo presents an exhibition on British art of the 1990s and the Young British Artists. The show reconstructs a decade of experimentation and cultural change. A complex portrait of a scene that reshaped contemporary art.
At the Artizon Museum in Tokyo, a major exhibition devoted to Ettore Sottsass reconsiders his work as a threshold between design, ritual and imagination, beyond the limits of functionalism.