A major retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo traces the work of Tada Minami, a postwar Japanese artist who developed an original exploration of the relationship between light, space, and matter. Born in 1924 and active until the early 2000s, Minami's practice spanned painting, sculpture, and design, gradually focusing on installations that transform the environment through reflective surfaces and industrial materials. The exhibition brings together approximately seventy works, from early paintings of the 1940s to sculptures made from stainless steel, glass, and acrylic. In many works, light becomes the true protagonist: reflected, filtered, or multiplied by geometric structures, it alters the perception of space and directly engages the viewer. A significant portion of the artist's career is linked to architectural interventions. Luminous walls, glass installations, and sculptures integrated into public buildings demonstrate the artist's attempt to bring art out of the museum and into the urban landscape of contemporary Japan. The retrospective thus provides a profile of an artist who worked at the intersection of sculpture, architecture, and technology, anticipating many of the installation and environmental practices of contemporary art.
The National Museum of Western Art presents the complete series of Hokusai’s Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji from the Iuchi Collection. The prints depict Fuji as a shifting presence, seen from multiple viewpoints and embedded in everyday life. A unified project that reshaped the visual language of landscape.
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.