TATSUO MIYAJIMA (Japan, B. 1957)
TATSUO MIYAJIMA (Japan, B. 1957)
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TATSUO MIYAJIMA (Japan, B. 1957)

Counterspiral (Red)

Details
TATSUO MIYAJIMA (Japan, B. 1957)
Counterspiral (Red)
LED, IC, electric wire, and iron panel
312.7 x 60.6 cm. (123 1/8 x 23 7/8 in.)
Executed in 2000
Provenance
Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York, USA
Private Collection, USA
Literature
Artsonje Center & Artsonje Museum, Count of Life: Tatsuo Miyajima, exh. cat., Seoul, Korea & Gyeongju, Korea, 2002 (illustrated, p. 57).
Museo d'Arte Contemporanea Roma, Tatsuo Miyajima, exh. cat., Rome, Italy, 2004 (illustrated, p. 117).
Hiroshi Minamishima and Haruko Tomisawa (ed.), Contemporary Art Museum Kumamoto, Beyond The Death: Tatsuo Miyajima, exh. cat., Kumamoto, Japan, 2005 (detail of the work is illustrated, unpaged).
Exhibited
New York, USA, Luhring Augustine Gallery, Tatsuo Miyajima: Totality of Life, 16 December 2000 - 27 January 2001.
Gyeongju, Korea, Artsonje Museum, Count of Life: Tatsuo Miyajima, 7 June-25 August 2002.
Seoul, Korea, Artsonje Centre, Count of Life: Tatsuo Miyajima, 7 September-10 November 2002.
Rome, Italy, Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Roma, Tatsuo Miyajima, 22 May-29 August 2004.

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Eric Chang
Eric Chang

Lot Essay

Japanese artist Tatsuo Miyajima fuses technology with a Buddhist's appreciation for time, existence and the mutability of experience. In the earliest years of his career, Miyajima was drawn to avant-garde performance, which eventually evolved into his interest in installation and the exploration of not only physical space but of time. In the 1980s, he moved away from performance and focused more on site specific installations and sculptures, working primarily with television monitors and LED systems (light emitting diode) which enabled him to convey his concerns with a minimalist, suggestive and elegantly philosophical approach.

Miyajima uses advanced technology and mathematics to convey universal concerns over life, death, and the passage of time. In the lot featured here, Counterspiral (Red) (Lot 131), Miyajima offers a monumental but delicately articulated sculpture in the shape of a perfect, looping spiral. Along the armature of the spiral are individual, vertical circuit boards, each illuminated by red double-digit numbers that change randomly, in sync, occasionally blank, before beginning again at the number 1. Against the dark background, the numbers hover in space, suggesting at once the form of a double helix as well as the inexorable march of time. The number zero looms over the piece by its absence, and the viewer is drawn into the mesmerizing loop, marked by the light dramatic tension of that which never appears. Miyajima's works then manage to embody the profound dualities of existence. He enacts both the uniqueness of a particular moment in time and its effervescence.

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