Terrada, a massive warehouse in Tennozu Isle, opens a part of its space as a contemporary art museum called What, which stands for Warehouse of Art Terrada. Unlike a typical museum, the artworks on display are pieces from collectors who store their art in the warehouse, meaning you’ll get to see works that aren’t generally available for public view. The museum also regularly features exhibitions of artists active in the contemporary scene, a museum shop and a separate art gallery and café where you can purchase work by up-and-coming artists on the spot.
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Details
- Address
- 2-6-10 Higashi-Shinagawa, Shinagawa
- Tokyo
- Transport:
- Tennozu Isle Station (Rinkai Line, Tokyo Monorail Haneda Line)
- Opening hours:
- 11am-6pm daily (last entry 5pm)
What’s on
What Museum’s latest exhibit, Synesthesia, is an interactive one. This engaging showcase is the work of a Japanese artist who uses air, water and light to craft mesmerising sculptures that blur the lines between perception and reality.
With a background in sociology and art education, Akihito Okunaka is inspired by late philosopher Bruno Latour to explore the connections between nature and society through our five senses. Here you get to touch, enter and lie down in a balloon-like installation and feel connected with your surroundings.
The 12-metre in diameter balloon sculpture is weighed down by a water 'bed' and bathed in different light frequencies. This multi-sensorial work promises a visual and tactile experience that blurs the lines between sight and touch. Imagine light refracting through multiple layers of translucent plastic film, creating a kaleidoscope of colours that dance across the surface, all while being swayed gently by the water bed.
This exhibition is closed on Mondays (except October 14, November 4, January 13, February 3 and 24) and New Year holidays.
Collecting? Connecting?
What Museum, in Tokyo waterfront district Tennozu, presents an ‘inadvertent’ collection of contemporary art belonging to renowned tech and AI entrepreneur, Takafumi Takahashi. The ‘T2 Collection’, which takes its name from owner’s initials, has been amassed over the past six years as Takahashi gradually dived deeper into the world of modern art. Along the way he picked up works which captivated him in some way, by notable Japanese and international artists including Kohei Nawa, Barry McGee and Tatsuo Miyajima. What was never consciously acquired with a ‘collection’ in mind is now on public display for the first – and possibly only – time.
Across the 35 diverse works featured here, a common thread is Takahashi’s recognition of a connection between art and entrepreneurship, in that the leading players in both spheres challenge the world with unique and unprecedented concepts and visions. One exhibition room, dedicated to the medium of photography, explores how contemporary artists have developed their photographic expression amid a rapid rate of change in both technology and the role of images in society.
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