1. Gallery Koyanagi
    Installation view of 'Arisa Kumagai: Single bed' at Gallery Koyanagi, 2019 ©Arisa Kumagai / Courtesy of Gallery Koyanagi, Tokyo. Photo: Keizo Kioku
  2. Gallery Koyanagi
    Installation view of 'Michaël Borremans / Mark Manders' at Gallery Koyanagi, 2019 ©Michaël Borremans / Mark Manders, Courtesy of Zeno X Gallery, Antwerp and Gallery Koyanagi, Tokyo. Photo: Keizo Kioku

Gallery Koyanagi

  • Art | Galleries
  • Ginza
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Time Out says

This long-standing gallery, founded in Ginza in 1995, may have a reputation for photography, but that’s been by chance rather than design. It still represents photographer Hiroshi Sugimoto as well as animation queen Tabaimo, and works with notable foreign artists such as Marlene Dumas and Sophie Calle.

Details

Address
Koyanagi Bldg 9F, 1-7-5 Ginza, Chuo
Tokyo
Transport:
Ginza Station (Ginza, Hibiya, Marunouchi lines), exit A9; Ginza-Itchome Station (Yurakucho line), exit 7
Opening hours:
12noon-7pm, closed Sun, Mon & hols

What’s on

Christian Marclay: Listening

Gallery Koyanagi in Ginza presents a new series of collages by Christian Marclay, a pioneering figure in experimental music. Having started out using turntables and vinyl records as instruments before extending his practice into video, collage and installation, the California-born artist’s work interrogates how we perceive, construct and remember sound. Placing auditory experience at the centre of visual form, the artist’s fourth solo exhibition with the gallery comes on the 40th anniversary of his first visit to Japan and continues Marclay’s long-standing engagement with sampling and recomposition. The exhibited works draw on fragments of popular culture – magazines, record sleeves, film imagery – reassembled through processes of cutting, layering and omission. In the Concentric Listening series, faces are reduced to hollow outlines, their ears preserved as points of entry into an otherwise absent interior. These nested forms ripple outward, suggesting listening as a cumulative, resonant act. Elsewhere, Oculi (Listening Trio) transforms record sleeves into apertures through which partial images emerge. In Marclay’s hands, collage becomes more than a technique: it operates as a metaphor for perception itself, where meaning arises through fragments, overlaps and echoes.
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