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Requiem: Cats, Portraits explores artist Yokoo Tadanori’s profound connections with departed friends, family, and beloved cats, tracing his influential career from the 1960s to the present. Born in 1936, Yokoo’s artistic journey has always been shaped by deep personal relationships and collaborative endeavors across various creative fields. The exhibition features portraits and personal statements, alongside items like the Tama, Come Home series, dedicated to his late cat. Visitors will also see examples of his enduring friendship with designer Issey Miyake, including iconic invitation designs from the 1970s onwards. This unique presentation invites viewers to reflect on how cherished relationships transcend time, influencing an artist’s vision and offering a glimpse into a timeless “Yokoo World.”Wow! ★ Y-Junctions presents Yokoo Tadanori’s extensive and evolving series, initiated in 2000, which transforms familiar three-way road junctions into profound artistic landscapes. This ambitious project began when Yokoo photographed a night scene in his hometown, revealing unexpected depths in everyday scenery. What started as an introspective world of light and shadow evolved through phases of explosive color, continuously generating new variations. The exhibition highlights this ongoing artistic exploration, featuring works from the series’ early years (2000-2005) and more recent creations from 2016 onwards. Visitors can witness how one artist’s singular vision redefines perception, inviting reflection on the hidden beauty and endless transformations within the commonplace world around us.Yokoo Tadanori: State of Emergency Declaration explores the artist’s prescient depictions of tense situations where the line between fact and fiction dissolves. Long before the novel coronavirus crisis, Yokoo Tadanori repeatedly created works that now resonate with contemporary global events, reflecting a timeless human experience of uncertainty. This exhibition features his impactful paintings alongside an installation of his recent online series, With Corona, which incorporates imagery like masks in a direct artistic response to the virus. Visitors can observe how Yokoo’s vision, spanning from earlier works to current creations, challenges perceptions of reality, encouraging reflection on art’s power to interpret and shape our understanding of the world during moments of profound change.N.K. Roerich’s exhibition unveils over 80 captivating works inspired by his 1925 Central Asian expedition. With an extraordinary blend of majestic mountain landscapes, Buddhist monasteries, and formidable fortresses, Roerich crafts a compelling narrative of heroism and spiritual pursuit that transcends cultural boundaries. His pieces celebrate the sacredness of labor and the enduring human spirit, evoking a universal call to courage and resilience. Roerich’s unique style, characterized by what can be termed “epic realism,” draws upon his deep understanding of history, folklore, and religious traditions.Can anger and rage be justified in a world riddled with oppression and inequality? Are these emotions destructive forces or vital catalysts for social change? As democracy faces crises and populism gains ground globally, these questions have sparked renewed debate. Contemporary artists have responded, using their work to navigate and challenge the pressing issues of our time. The exhibition ‘Time for Outrage!’ in Düsseldorf explores these questions through six thematic blocks: Right-wing Shift, Trumpism, Protest, Postcolonialism, Feminism, and Discrimination. Across a diverse range of mediums — including installations, drawings, paintings, sculptures, photography, and video art — 40 international artists immerse viewers in the visceral realms of protest, social dissent, and public anger. The exhibition doesn’t just present anger as a raw emotion; it portrays it as a vehicle for dialogue, resistance, and empowerment in the face of systemic injustice. A substantial portion of the works on display come from the collection of entrepreneur and collector Florian Peters-Messer, whose commitment to socially engaged art amplifies the urgent messages these pieces convey.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txj1MWCWseY&rel=0&autoplay=0&controls=1
Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#1)
Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#1)
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Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#2)
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Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#3)
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Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#4)
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Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#5)
Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#5)
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Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#5)
Curators in Panic – A still from the docursion (#7)
18+
Yokoo Tadanori Museum of Contemporary Art Arts | Culture

Curators in Panic

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Original Exhibition Title: 学芸員危機一髪
Japan Kobe 2021 21 Japanese Japanese, English
Art Collecting HistoryArt in the Time of CrisisArtistic ResearchContemporary ArtCultural MemoryCultural ResilienceDaily LifeDigital EconomyInnovations in ArtMuseum Engagement

All rights and copyrights to the film are held by the producer: Yokoo Tadanori Museum of Contemporary Art, Kobe, Japan.

For any legal inquiries, please contact the museum directly.

excoursio does not hold any copyright; it merely shares the original film material to support wider access and the dissemination of knowledge.

In a nutshell

The exhibition Curators in Panic addresses the unpredictable realities of operating a contemporary art museum, presenting unique works by artist Yokoo Tadanori, who has continuously redefined painting since the 1980s. Rooted in the early 2020s — a period marked by the coronavirus crisis and logistical demands from the large-scale retrospective Genkyo Yokoo Tadanori — this show responds directly to the sudden absence of major holdings and the challenges of museum governance. Three participating curators, deeply familiar with the collection, selected their personal favorites not included in the tour, highlighting the profound existence of the artist’s full creative output. This perspective reflects the confusion of managing a cultural facility during a state of emergency. By adopting the curators’ viewpoint, visitors gain an opportunity to freely enjoy the viewing experience and rediscover the rich, constantly changing creative world of Yokoo Tadanori.

Why should you watch this?

Curators in Panic speaks directly to the uncertainties of our present, when cultural institutions and everyday life alike are shaped by disruption and absence. The film captures the uneasy humor of curators calling their own exhibition a “state of emergency,” a phrase that resonates far beyond the museum walls in a world still negotiating the aftershocks of the coronavirus crisis. Their candid voices, recounting both discoveries and setbacks, turn curatorial practice into a deeply human story of resilience and adaptation. Viewers are left with a striking reminder that art, even when interrupted or displaced, continues to create meaning and connection.

Curators

Yu Hayashi

Bio

Yu Hayashi is a Japanese curator at the Yokoo Tadanori Museum of Contemporary Art, known for his work on exhibitions dedicated to Tadanori Yokoo, the celebrated graphic designer and painter. Hayashi has edited several exhibition catalogs that explore Yokoo’s distinctive blend of psychedelic, Pop Art-inspired imagery with traditional Japanese aesthetics.

All films Last updated: 01/09/2025

Atsuo Yamamoto

Bio

Atsuo Yamamoto is a Japanese curator and Chief Curator at the Yokoo Tadanori Museum of Contemporary Art (Y+T MOCA), Kobe. He has held curator roles previously at the Ashiya City Museum of Art & History and the Museum of Modern Art, Shiga. Yamamoto has been closely involved with the establishment of Y+T MOCA since about 2011; the museum opened in November 2012 in a renovated wing of a building originally designed by architect Tōgō Murano. Under his direction, the museum’s holdings have grown to thousands of works and materials — including hundreds of paintings, prints, posters, drawings, photographs and archival boxes — and he oversees the archival, conservation, and exhibition programs. Yamamoto is also known for his interest in post-war Japanese modernism, including the Gutai art movement. He has curated exhibitions and contributed publications about Gutai members such as Saburo Murakami.

All films Last updated: 12/09/2025

Megumi Hirabayashi

Bio

Megumi Hirabayashi is curator at the Yokoo Tadanori Museum of Contemporary Art, Kobe. She previously worked at the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, and with Gifu Prefectural Museum Hida. Hirabayashi plays a central role in managing Yokoo’s archives, selecting both finished and in-process works for exhibition, and she champions displays that reveal not only Yokoo’s iconic finished pieces but also his sketches, idea notebooks, and lesser-seen creative material.

All films Last updated: 15/09/2025

Artist

Tadanori Yokoo

Bio

Tadanori Yokoo (born 1936 in Nishiwaki, Hyogo, Japan) is a celebrated Japanese graphic designer, illustrator, printmaker, and painter, widely recognized as one of Japan’s most influential contemporary artists. After a successful career in graphic design in the 1960s and 70s, where he gained international acclaim for his psychedelic, pop art-infused posters and album covers, he shifted his focus to painting in 1981. Yokoo’s work is characterized by its vibrant colors, intricate collages, and a unique blend of Japanese tradition with Western influences, often exploring themes of mysticism, the subconscious, and the human condition. His diverse career and unconventional approach have left an indelible mark on both Japanese and international art.

All films Last updated: 15/09/2025
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