Artist Mariko Mori 森 万里子 : Between the Ancient Gods and the Future | Louisiana Channel

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • “It seems to me that a lot of our conceptual ideas are already carried out in the past. And we’re at a point to inherit those ideas to the future.”
    Japanese artist Mariko Mori shares a look into her studio and home as well as her own artistic practice.
    Mariko Mori was born in Tokyo, Japan, but has lived for several years in both New York and London. Her mother was an art historian, and the young Mori was introduced to art through her. "When I was nine years old, I was looking through her collection of postcards of all the Western art," Mori remembers: "Somehow I found Jackson Pollock's no. 13 painting. And I was so thrilled. I didn't know what abstract painting was, but I really felt freedom."
    Today, Mariko Mori works in various mediums, from photography and sculpture to installation and architecture. Her studio - and home - was the first architectural project she did. The house is located at Okinawa, a tropical island south of Japan. Inspired by the surrounding nature Mori wanted "the house to be an extension of that. A part of nature." The untraditional shape of the house is eye-catching: "Originally, I was thinking of just building an architecture building, but it became more like a sculpture or form," she says and continues: "The shape tried to accommodate the wind coming from the north." This explains why the building is smaller in one part and bigger in another.
    Having spent years traveling around the world, visiting pre-historical sites, Mori noticed that “humans are a very tiny portion of the whole nature. And I started to understand the dynamics of Earth." She explains further: "When I visited pre-historical sites around the world, it was really this evidence of how our remote ancestors had a deep relationship with nature." Not only is Mariko Mori inspired by the past, the future is very much also present in a lot of her work. Being a fan of the Japanese manga, Astro Boy, from a young age, she became fascinated with ideas of the future. "The future is something we can change. And the future is something that we can imagine." Many of Mori's works has a futuristic aesthetic: "The look is perhaps quite futuristic, but our mission is to inherit something that is treasured."
    "I was very much interested in 1970s conceptual, minimal art and artworks, which was very much influenced by Zen Buddhism." Looking into her Japanese heritage has also had a huge influence on the work of Mori. "I thought that it's very relevant for us to really introduce Zen Buddhism in a proper way." She has done this by exploring the art of the traditional Japanese tea ceremony. "The direct research is reflected in my work, such as Zen Buddhism or Shinto traditions, as well as more prehistorical culture."
    "Creating things is really the true nature of humans." To Mariko Mori, art is something that speaks directly to one's soul. "If you stop creating things, then you're not really using the most ability of your being. It's a fundamental act," she continues: "We are creating our world by using our creativity. Our future is really dependent on our art."
    Mariko Mori, born in Tokyo in 1967, is a Japanese multidisciplinary artist known for her photographs and videos depicting fantastic deities, robots, alien creatures, and spaceships. Mori’s work is featured in many public museum collections, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art(LACMA), Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and others. Mori’s solo exhibitions have been exhibited throughout the world, including at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo, The Brooklyn Museum of Art in New York, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, The Serpentine Gallery, in London, and The Dallas Museum of Art, in Dallas, USA. Several renowned museums have presented Mori’s solo exhibitions, as well as acquired Mori’s works in their collections, including Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris, The Prada Foundation in Milan, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, in Los Angeles (USA), The Guggenheim Museum, in New York, The Israel Museum, in Jerusalem, The Museum of Modern Art, in New York, and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark.
    Mariko Mori was interviewed by Jens H. Jensen at her studio in Miyako Island, Japan, in September 2022.
    Camera: Yudai Maruyama
    Edited by: Malte Bruun Fals
    Produced by Christian Lund
    Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023.
    Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet, C.L. Davids Fond og Samling, and Fritz Hansen.
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Комментарии • 19

  • @JootsyMann
    @JootsyMann 9 месяцев назад +3

    Marvelous. Thank you Mariko Mori. I was really moved by your being, and I learned a lot. Thank you, also, Louisiana Channel. 🙏🙏

  • @fabianthaesler1317
    @fabianthaesler1317 9 месяцев назад

    Honoring nature - beautiful resprentation of eternal beauty. Thanks for sharing!

  • @munaykiperutour
    @munaykiperutour 8 месяцев назад

    Wonderful! It so exquisite listen to her. It brings so much peace and love❤

  • @margietalk
    @margietalk 9 месяцев назад

    thank you to Ms. Mori and the Lousiana Channel for this beautiful segment.
    "We can communicate, soul to soul, through our art."

  • @saraaziz3736
    @saraaziz3736 9 месяцев назад

    Beautiful work, beautiful vision, beautiful insight, thank you :)

  • @NY_Mountain_Man
    @NY_Mountain_Man 9 месяцев назад

    I mentioned New Orleans once in my video and the algorithm suggested me your channel. Glad it did. This is a great channel.
    Thanks for making it.

  • @iamrjdennis
    @iamrjdennis 9 месяцев назад

    So cool! 💛

  • @rossrobbins7707
    @rossrobbins7707 9 месяцев назад +13

    I wish my parents were gazillionaires 😢

    • @rossrobbins7707
      @rossrobbins7707 9 месяцев назад +12

      Btw I'm not trying to say anything negative about her. It's just that nepo babies can create the art they do because they can afford to do so. Imagine how many incredible artists will never know this kind of success simply because they were born poor.

    • @wukong_will
      @wukong_will 9 месяцев назад +5

      A person doesn’t have to be wealthy in order to make art! There are a lot of what you would call poor people who make art, everyday…….

    • @mario7frankielee
      @mario7frankielee 9 месяцев назад +3

      i think to be rich is a blessing and a curse
      i’m a musician & a painter, always on the brink of complet „brokeness“
      so to watch this can make one jealous
      but i wouldn’t want to have it any different
      love & peace

    • @wukong_will
      @wukong_will 9 месяцев назад

      Great reply @@mario7frankielee 🙏 for some weird reason with art, people think that you have to be "rich (wealthy)" to make art. Why is that? Everyone can make art. It is NOT an elite activity but for some weird reason we think it is?? 🙏

    • @wukong_will
      @wukong_will 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@whowantsusernames oh yeah, you are correct. Life is completely different if an artist has the financial assistance of their parents. And if the art you make doesn't sell of course we all need to find other avenues of employment (but there are still plenty of work in the field of art one can work in to utilise your skills.....animation, VFX, GFX, concept art, video game designers, graphic design, etc). I work in a completely different field to art, but I still find time everyday to draw, paint, pick up a pencil and scribble down an idea. If you are passionate about art, you will find the time to do it. Like any hobby. Or even exercise. You just make time.

  • @mike727272
    @mike727272 4 месяца назад

    Very beautiful.
    Mariko Mori not sure if she is reading these comments. But did you live in Toronto Canada in the early 2000’s and know a lady by the name sanae?( my wife)

  • @Evaaugustine97
    @Evaaugustine97 9 месяцев назад

    Oh my god I am sooo happy you don’t even know

  • @mamumonkan
    @mamumonkan 9 месяцев назад

    this feels completely out of place in today's world

  • @AmyElizabethFrith
    @AmyElizabethFrith 9 месяцев назад

    I absolutely love this ! This feeds my soul . 🤍🤍