Gutai: Splendid Playground
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2013
Gutai: Splendid Playground presents the creative spectrum of Japan’s most influential avant-garde collective of the postwar era.
Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2011
Marking Infinity presents the work of artist-philosopher Lee Ufan, charting his creation of a visual, conceptual, and theoretical terrain that has radically expanded the possibilities for painting and sculpture since the 1960s.
The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860–1989
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2009
This exhibition traces how Asian art, literature, and philosophy were transmitted and transformed within American cultural and intellectual currents, influencing the articulation of new visual and conceptual languages.
Cai Guo-Qiang: I Want to Believe
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2008
Cai Guo-Qiang is internationally acclaimed as an artist whose creative transgressions and cultural provocations have literally exploded the accepted parameters of art making in our time.
Transmitting the Forms of Divinity: Early Buddhist Art from Korea and Japan
Japan Society Gallery, 2003
The first major international exhibition devoted to a comparative examination of Korean and Japanese Buddhist art, Transmitting the Forms of Divinity explored the formative links between the ancient cultures of Korea and Japan and the early development of Buddhist art.
Kazari: Decoration and Display in Japan, 15th-19th Centuries
Japan Society Gallery, 2002
A major international exhibition introducing innovative scholarship on Japanese art to the West, Kazari: Decoration and Display in Japan examined the dynamic development of Japanese art over five centuries, focusing on particular periods of high cultural achievement.
YES YOKO ONO
Japan Society Gallery, 2001
Yes Yoko Ono, the first American retrospective of the work of pioneering avant-garde artist Yoko Ono, offered a comprehensive reevaluation of her work. The exhibition explored Ono’s position within the postwar international avant-garde and her critical and influential role in originating forms of contemporary art, music, film and performance.
The Art of Mu Xin: Landscape Paintings and Prison Notes
Yale University Art Gallery, 2001
The first major exhibition of works by the contemporary Chinese writer-artist Mu Xin featured works created while the artist was imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution (1966–76) and its immediate aftermath.
Japanese Art After 1945:
Scream Against the Sky
Yokohama Museum of Art, 1994
This exhibition initiated the academic and curatorial field of postwar and contemporary Japanese art in North America.
Alternative Visions: Liu Dan and Hiromitsu Morimoto
Gallery at Takashimaya, New York, Tokyo, Yokohama, and Osaka, 1993–94
Alternative Visions presented the ink paintings of Chinese-born artist Liu Dan who was little-known at the time.
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