The National Art Center Tokyo presents an exhibition devoted to British art of the 1990s, placing the experience of the Young British Artists at its centre and examining the cultural context in which they emerged. The exhibition reconstructs a decade marked by profound social change and a climate of experimentation that helped redefine the role of contemporary art on the international stage. Emerging in the late 1980s, the Young British Artists are characterised by a direct and often radical approach to materials, subjects, and visual languages. The exhibition traces this period through works that reflect a constant dialogue with popular culture, the media, music, and fashion, portraying a generation that transformed London’s urban environment into an open and competitive creative laboratory. The exhibition brings together works of painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installation, offering a broad overview of the artistic research developed during those years. The works reveal how British art of the period engaged with themes of identity, the body, memory, and social structures, often through a provocative language closely tied to the realities of its time. Alongside the most widely recognised figures, the exhibition includes artists who played a less visible yet decisive role in shaping the artistic climate of the decade. What emerges is a complex picture in which individual practices intersect with networks of relationships, independent spaces, and new modes of production and exhibition.
The New National Theatre Tokyo presents a new production of Richard Strauss’s Elektra. The opera condenses a tragedy of obsession and violence into a single, intense act, driven by an extreme orchestral language. The performance is sung in German with surtitles and supported by audience-focused services.
The Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum presents an exhibition devoted to Marimekko, revisiting its history through the art of printmaking. Fabrics, garments, and graphic materials trace a visual language built on pattern and colour. The exhibition connects design, production, and everyday life.