Movement in Many Parts Shotgun Review in Art Practical’s 4.1 Shotgun Issue

Noritaka Minami, A706 (Wall I), 2011; archival pigment print mounted on aluminum; 30 x 38 in. Courtesy of the Artist and the Kearny Street Workshop, San Francisco.

Humans are resilient. Our anatomy is extraordinary and highly complex. We build, construct, destroy, and synthesize. But human nature involves understanding the biology and mechanisms that provoke us to move and accelerate. In Movement in Many Parts, an exhibition curated by Lucy Seena K. Lin and Weston Teruya, artists investigate human evolution through nature and industry. Their ruminations are shown through organic forms, moving image, photography, drawing, and painting. Each work reminds us of the adage that the totality of many things in concert is far greater than one single part of the whole.

In A1007 (Wall II) (2011), Noritaka Minami asks us to peer into the modular housing built within the Japanese urban landscape. At the start of the series, a viewer is let into a small room with a single, large round window that looks out onto the city and other pods. There is no returning gaze; a viewer sees only the disheveled room of a seemingly busy city dweller. The room could very well be a viewer’s; the window is the only way to see outside and to observe other living things. Stagnancy is apparent through the dull colors of bed sheets and the aging, disintegrating papers on the wall. Even the dated typography of the numbers on the clock suggests a thick layer of dust has settled over things untouched. The scene gives the sense that the busyness of city life has depleted the weary soul that inhabits this space. Minami’sTower (Facade 1) (2011) includes a segment of the exterior architecture that gives a viewer not only a sense of scale but also of how nature has weathered the building’s exterior. The erosion suggests that the original design is obsolete in this fast-paced environment.

While Minami’s photographs depict an environment, Kim Anno’s photographs ponder the effects of climate change and demonstrate how humans may adapt to and work with rising sea levels. Men and Women in Water Cities (2011) shows individuals fully clothed in suits and corporate attire turning their bodies toward a viewer, as though caught in mid-action. The picture plane presents something absurd. Yet, is it as absurd as we think? Anno proposes peculiar but perhaps ingenious ways we might survive despite nature’s disposition, showing what humans may be driven to do when it is necessary to endure. It is this human tendency toward movement that forces resiliency.

Originally posted to Shotgun Reviews on Art Practical, please click here to view.

2 responses to “Movement in Many Parts Shotgun Review in Art Practical’s 4.1 Shotgun Issue”

  1. Because I was impressed by the first one, Noritaka Minami, A706 (Wall I), I looked for the others: A1007 (Wall II) (2011), Minami’sTower (Facade 1) (2011), Men and Women in Water Cities (2011), but they weren’t handy. I’m sure the other ones you described are a must-see!

    1. Overall, Minami’s work is so strong. I’m not one to be easily swayed by a great composition. Of course, this is a part of why I am drawn to certain photographs, of course, but some of the angles at which he is capturing the architecture and the rooms amazes me. When you step back, really step back, and consider the perspective and the “eye” of the camera in his shots, you start to wonder, where exactly was he standing? How did he get this particular angle? Impressive indeed. Kim Anno’s work is fantastic as well AND I didn’t realize that she is a faculty member at CCA. I don’t know her but it’s so great to find out that so many talented people (both faculty and staff) are at CCA!

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