NEW YORK, NY.- Japan Society Gallery hosts the solo institutional debut in New York City of Turner Prize-winning artist Simon Starling with his major new installation, Simon Starling: At Twilight (After W. B. Yeats Noh Reincarnation) this fall. On view from October 14, 2016 through January 15, 2017, the ambitious, new multimedia production by Starling incorporates major Western Modernist as well as classical Japanese artworks, juxtaposing Japans traditional, centuries-old and highly ritualize masked, dramatic theater (noh) and its influence on the avant garde this century.
The exhibition marks the curatorial debut of Yukie Kamiya, following her appointment as Gallery Director of Japan Society in November 2015. Its very special that Japan Society can present Simons latest project, given his longstanding commitment to understanding global cultures including Japan. Its also an honor for me to work with Simon again, after collaborating at the 2014 Yokohama Triennial and the Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art in 2010. Simon is a visionary for how his artworks transcend time and placeand challenge us as the viewer to engage with the politics of our time, says Ms. Kamiya.
In conceptualizing At Twilight, Starling looked back to the early 20th century and W.B. Yeats dance play At the Hawks Well for inspiration. Yeats, who never traveled to Japan but was greatly inspired by Japanese noh, wrote the play alongside American poet Ezra Pound, who was an early translator of noh plays into English. First staged in 1916 in London, At the Hawks Well helped spark interest in noh and Japanese culture among Western audiences. At Twilight commemorates the centennial of the original performance and weaves together Starlings research of classical and Modernist artworks with his own contemporary pieces to explore the impact of traditional Japanse art on the 20th-century Western avant garde.
At Twilight reimagines Japan Societys galleries as an immersive theatrical environment for visitors, including a forest of new masks and costumes by Starling (in collaboration with master mask makers Yasuo Michii and Kumi Sakurai); a video reenactment of the climactic Hawks Dance from Yeats play (choreographed by Javier de Frutos and Scottish Ballet); and archival materials that Starling used as research displayed alongside masterpieces of early 20th-century Modernism. The installation brings to life the surprising personal and professional interconnections that Starling discovered through his research. Key figures who collaborated with Yeats on the 1916 production are represented as noh masks, including Pound, Nancy Cunard, Michio Ito (the Japanese dancer who played the Hawk in the original 1916 performance) and Yeats himself. By incoporating these notables through newly crafted noh masks, modeled after artworks by Constantin Brancusi, Jacob Epstein and Isamu Noguchi, Starling reveals the multiple sources of inspiration in the arts around WWI. One of the exhibitions highlights is a mask representing Cunard, based on a 1928 abstract sculpted portrait of her by Brancusi.
Simon Starling: At Twilight includes important loans from The Museum of Modern Art (New York), The Noguchi Museum (New York), the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College (Clinton, New York), and the Estate of Constantin Brancusi. At Twilight is organized by Japan Society in collaboration with The Common Guild, Glasgow, Scotland.