<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>aaploit Journal</title><description>Critical writing rooted in contemporary Japanese art practice, based in Tokyo, Japan</description><link>https://aaploit.com/</link><language>en</language><item><title>Irreversible Impressions: Michimata Aoi and the Staircase You Cannot Climb Back</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/irreversible-impressions/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/irreversible-impressions/</guid><description>In Michimata&apos;s woodblock prints, a reproductive medium that cannot reproduce meets a staircase you cannot climb back. Each carved layer is permanent. Each step, once passed, changes shape behind you.</description><pubDate>Sat, 28 Feb 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>What Still Transmits: Camille Henrot&apos;s Ikebana and the Problem of Translation</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/what-still-transmits/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/what-still-transmits/</guid><description>Camille Henrot&apos;s work stages a paradox of translation: cultures may remain fundamentally untranslatable, yet something continues to circulate between them. In the ikebana series Is it possible to be a revolutionary and love flowers?, books are translated into floral arrangements, transforming language into form. Rather than resolving cultural difference, Henrot makes its limits visible, suggesting that meaning often emerges not through perfect understanding but through the persistence of imperfect transmission.</description><pubDate>Sun, 01 Feb 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>The Distance of Seeing: Takahashi Misaki</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/takahashi-misaki-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/takahashi-misaki-review-01/</guid><description>Takahashi Misaki’s paintings are less about objects than about the distance from which we see them. Working with skeleton models, skulls, and preserved specimens, she constructs scenes in which the act of looking becomes the subject. In her recent work, this logic culminates in a still life of a human body—leaving the viewer suspended between seeing a person and seeing a thing.</description><pubDate>Tue, 27 Jan 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>The Ethics of Small Oscillations: On the Exhibition of KUMAGAE Yuna</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/kumagae-yuna-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/kumagae-yuna-review-01/</guid><pubDate>Sat, 17 Jan 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Voice of Void: Ho Tzu Nyen and the Structure of Not Knowing</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/voice-of-void/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/voice-of-void/</guid><description>In Voice of Void, Singaporean artist Ho Tzu Nyen revisits the wartime philosophy of the Kyoto School not to judge its thinkers, but to examine the structure that allowed abstract thought to remain detached from consequence. Through a VR installation that places the viewer inside conditions of restricted perception, the work asks whether the gap between knowing and understanding persists today.</description><pubDate>Fri, 02 Jan 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Critical Pastiche: On the Paintings of Asano Miyabi</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/critical-pastiche/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/critical-pastiche/</guid><description>In paintings by Asano Miyabi, Renaissance compositions are reproduced with striking fidelity while their symbolic structures are quietly inverted. Cupid becomes a host-club tantō, mythological rhetoric gives way to visible economic exchange, and the language of classical painting reveals what it once concealed. This essay proposes the term “critical pastiche” to describe that operation.</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Asymmetrical Gazes: On the Power of Looking</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/asymmetrical-gazes-on-the-power-of-looking/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/asymmetrical-gazes-on-the-power-of-looking/</guid><description>Asymmetrical Gazes brings together three artists whose works examine how visual power operates. Drawing on art history, social media imagery, and the technological conditions of the smartphone, Asano Miyabi, Kano Maashu, and Okoshi Madoka each reveal a different site where the act of looking is structured by systems of visibility, mediation, and control.</description><pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;I Am Probably Not the Right Voice for These Paintings&quot; by Ishiguro Hikaru</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishiguro-hikaru-review-02/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishiguro-hikaru-review-02/</guid><description>In I Am Probably Not the Right Voice for These Paintings, Ishiguro Hikaru’s works are positioned at a distance from language. Made with cotton cloth, ink, and mineral pigments that settle unpredictably into the fabric, the paintings emerge from an encounter between intention and material agency. Modest in scale, they require close viewing and sustained attention, unfolding according to a slower, asynchronous rhythm of perception.</description><pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Foreigners Everywhere: Experiencing the 60th Venice Biennale</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/the-60th-venice-biennale/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/the-60th-venice-biennale/</guid><description>At the 60th Venice Biennale, titled Stranieri Ovunque / Foreigners Everywhere, curator Adriano Pedrosa proposed a world seen through the condition of the foreigner. Moving through the exhibition, I became aware that this condition was not simply a theme but a position the viewer inevitably occupies—within the Biennale, within the city of Venice, and within global cultural circulation.</description><pubDate>Sun, 17 Aug 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;Ken&quot; (圏): Osa Seiichiro&apos;s Painting Practice</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/Ken-Osa-Seiichiros-Painting-Practice/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/Ken-Osa-Seiichiros-Painting-Practice/</guid><description>Osa Seiichiro builds the picture plane through successive layers of paint — not as depiction of depth but as sedimented time. The concept he calls ken (圏) is not a formal strategy but an ontological proposition.</description><pubDate>Sat, 16 Aug 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Paradoxical Dépaysement in Gregor Schneider&apos;s Spatial Practice</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/paradoxical-depaysement/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/paradoxical-depaysement/</guid><description>In his spatial installations, Gregor Schneider places viewers inside sequences of nearly identical rooms where perception gradually loses its frame of reference. The experience produces what I call Paradoxical Dépaysement: a condition in which immersion and critical distance arise simultaneously, forcing viewers to search for differences within an absence of difference.</description><pubDate>Thu, 07 Aug 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Light Dwelling in Shadows: Tazaki Ari&apos;s &quot;reunion&quot;</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/tazaki-ari-review-02/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/tazaki-ari-review-02/</guid><description>In reunion, Tazaki Ari constructs a scene structured by absence. Empty baby strollers appear throughout the composition, standing in for unseen figures. At one moment, what seems to be a person resolves instead into a stroller through the logic of its shadow. In that brief correction, the viewer becomes aware of the act of looking itself—of constructing meaning from light, shadow, and surface.</description><pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Chiasme: On Seeing and Being Seen</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/chiasme-on-seeing-and-being-seen/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/chiasme-on-seeing-and-being-seen/</guid><description>Drawing on Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s notion of chiasme—the intertwining of seeing and being seen—this exhibition brings together four painters whose works return the act of looking to the viewer. Through shifting surfaces, structural frames, and unstable spaces, the paintings require presence and movement. The viewer cannot remain outside; perception becomes an entanglement in which seeing and being seen unfold together.</description><pubDate>Mon, 23 Jun 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>Pierre Huyghe: Liminal – A Japanese Perspective</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/pierre-huyghe-liminal/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/pierre-huyghe-liminal/</guid><description>In Liminal, Pierre Huyghe constructs exhibitions not as finished works but as living systems that evolve through time, viewers, and circumstance. Seen first at Punta della Dogana and later at Leeum Museum of Art, the exhibition revealed how translation across institutions and cultures reshapes the work itself—adding clarity in some contexts while removing the disorientation that Huyghe deliberately designs.</description><pubDate>Mon, 02 Jun 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;Yuri-shiro-iro no&quot; by Matsuda Nayuko</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/matsuda-nayuko-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/matsuda-nayuko-review-01/</guid><description>In Yuri-shiro-iro no, Matsuda Nayuko constructs a landscape that unfolds gradually to the viewer’s eye. Susuki-like plants appear in the foreground, followed by two small figures facing one another, and a forest beyond. Within the composition, several voids resist clear interpretation, sustaining a quiet openness in which forms remain in motion and meaning never fully settles.</description><pubDate>Sun, 09 Mar 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;Thank You, December 31st&quot; by Asano Miyabi</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/asano-miyabi-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/asano-miyabi-review-01/</guid><description>In Thank You, December 31st, Asano Miyabi presents fragments of an intimate exchange between sex workers and their clients. Camisoles hang from the ceiling, each softly illuminated by a smartphone screen displaying messages that switch before they can be fully read. Through this double veil of fabric and light, the work invites the viewer to look while withholding complete access—revealing a social reality that art history has often chosen not to see.</description><pubDate>Sat, 22 Feb 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;A Vessel Filling a Cup, Breathing Within&quot; by Ishimatsu Yufu</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishimatsu-yufu-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishimatsu-yufu-review-01/</guid><description>Installed on a staircase landing, Ishimatsu Yufu’s A Vessel Filling a Cup, Breathing Within unfolds gradually as viewers move through the space. Painted on warped Shina plywood with Japanese paper adhered to its surface, the work shifts subtly with changing light. Rather than demanding a fixed viewing position, the painting emerges through movement, revealing an image that drifts between support and surface.</description><pubDate>Fri, 14 Feb 2025 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;Endless Circle&quot; by Tazaki Ari</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/tazaki-ari-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/tazaki-ari-review-01/</guid><description>In Endless Circle, Tazaki Ari constructs a scene that gradually resolves from darkness: divers forming a ring around a fish, their shadows multiplying the circle across the surface. The goggle-shaped frame places the viewer inside the scene itself, looking through the same lens as the divers. The circle does not end at the edge of the canvas—it extends into the space where the viewer stands.</description><pubDate>Wed, 02 Oct 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>“Moonwhite Castle” by SATO Raimu</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/sato-raimu-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/sato-raimu-review-01/</guid><description>Moonwhite Castle (2023) by SATO Raimu is a ball-jointed sculpture with two heads on a single nude body, installed directly on the floor to disrupt conventional display. Constructed from stone powder clay, modeling paste, oil paint, and human hair, it inhabits a space between corporeal presence and visible articulation. The dual heads destabilize singular identity, creating a psychological tension that invites reflection on multiplicity, projection, and the constructed nature of selfhood.</description><pubDate>Thu, 25 Apr 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>“Utsuse no Himitsu ha Watashi nomi zo Shiru” by Ishiguro Hikaru</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishiguro-hikaru-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/ishiguro-hikaru-review-01/</guid><description>Ishiguro Hikaru’s large-scale painting unfolds less as an image than as a surface of layered perception. A lattice structure recalling the framework of earthen walls opens onto a vertiginous depth where faces, stars, and distant forms drift without fixed meaning. The work ultimately turns toward a quieter question: whether the boundary between the inner self and the surrounding world ever truly existed.</description><pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>&quot;Girl Worship&quot; KANO Maashu</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/kano-maashu-review-01/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/kano-maashu-review-01/</guid><description>Girl Worship brings the structure of belief into the present. Drawing on religious iconography, social media imagery, and silkscreen reproduction, KANO Maashu traces how devotion—whether directed toward God, money, or the screen—repeats the same gesture of self-offering across time.</description><pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2024 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Review</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item><item><title>The Art History of Beautiful Girls: From Traditional Bijin-ga to Digital Culture</title><link>https://aaploit.com/en/journal/feature-bisyoujo/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://aaploit.com/en/journal/feature-bisyoujo/</guid><description>The Art History of Beautiful Girls begins by rejecting the traditional category of bijin-ga in favor of bishōjo, reframing the figure of the beautiful girl as a media construct rather than a fixed art historical type. From Meiji-era girls’ magazines to contemporary digital culture, the exhibition traces how this figure has functioned as an open form—shaped collectively through repetition, transformation, and reception.</description><pubDate>Sun, 30 Oct 2022 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category>Feature Article</category><author>Saito Tsutomu, Director, aaploit</author></item></channel></rss>