ArtistsJiro Takamatsu
Jiro Takamatsu

Jiro Takamatsu

1936
Mixed Media
Representation
None documented
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0
Works in Collection
5
Assets Indexed
2
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
40%
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About

Why this artist matters now

Jirō Takamatsu was one of the most important postwar Japanese artists. Takamatsu used photography, sculpture, painting, drawing, and performance to fundamentally investigate the philosophical and material conditions of art. Takamatsu's practice was dedicated to the critique of cognition and perception, through the rendering and variation of morphological devices, such as shadow, tautology, appropriation, perceptual and perspective distortion and representation. Takamatsu's conceptual work can be understood through his notions of the Zero Dimension, which renders an object or form to observe its fundamental geometrical components. Takamatsu isolated these smallest constituent elements, asserting that these elements produce reality, or existence. For Takamatsu the elementary particle represents “the ultimate of division” and also “emptiness itself,” like the a line within a painting—there appears to be nothing more beyond the line itself. Yet, Takamatsu's end goal was not to just prove the presence or object-ness of these elements, but rather to use them as a way to challenge and prove the limits of human perception, leading to his fixation on “absence” or the things that are unobservable.

Source: Pace Gallery · Trust score: 100% · Updated 29d ago

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Mixed Media
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Images

Artsy artwork: Compound #703 (1976)
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Artsy artwork: Perspective (1967)
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Artsy artwork: Shadow (1997)
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Artsy artwork: Perspective (Unknown)
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Artsy artist portrait
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