Thomas Demand
Exhibition Outline
Thomas Demand (born 1964) is one of the leading figures on the German contemporary art scene. He is famous for recreating a scene himself then photographing this to produce carefully constructed pictures. Demand often recreates scenes of political or social events made paper life-sized models, based on photographs from mass media, then photographs the result. He cuts common images out of ordinary daily life--a bathroom with a glimpse of the bathtub, and a sink full of unwashed dishes, which, at first glance, could almost be mistaken for the real thing, but closer inspection reveals that the space contains an unnaturally uniform texture, producing a strange feeling of wrongness. Significant places, psychological landscapes set against everyday backgrounds; Demand quietly confronts us with these in a thrilling fashion.
This exhibition will be the first in a Japanese museum to present a comprehensive view of Demand's activities, from his earliest works to his recent film pieces.
This exhibition will be the first in a Japanese museum to present a comprehensive view of Demand's activities, from his earliest works to his recent film pieces.
Exhibition Information
Period: | May 19(Saturday) - June 8(Sunday) 2012 |
Closed on: | Monday |
Hours: | 10:00-18:00 (Tickets available until 17:30) |
Organized by: | Tokyo Metropolitan Foundation for History and Culture, Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo |
Supported by: | Institute für Auslandsbeziehungen e.V. |
With the special cooperation of: | Taka Ishii Gallery |
In cooperation with: | NEC Display Solutions, Ltd./ Sprüth Magers |
Admission: | Adult ¥1,000 (¥800) / University students & over 65yrs old ¥800 (¥640) / High school & Junior high school student ¥500 (¥400) / Free for under Elementary school *( ) price for a group, over 20 people *Free entry to MOT collection for exhibition ticket holders |
Catalogue: | To be published in May 2012 |
Also Showing: | Tokyo Wonder Wall May 26(Saturday) - June 17(Sunday) 2012 MOT Collection May 19(Saturday) - October 8(Monday, holiday) 2012 Bloomberg Pavilion Project: Yuko Mohri May 19(Saturday) - June 17(Sunday) |