Mono-ha artists

E839506

Mono-ha artists were a group of late-1960s Japanese avant-garde artists known for arranging natural and industrial materials in minimally altered, site-specific installations that emphasized the relationships between objects, space, and perception.

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Statements (51)

Predicate Object
instanceOf artist collective
avant-garde art movement
activeInPeriod early 1970s
late 1960s
alsoKnownAs Mono-ha group NERFINISHED
artHistoricalRelation parallel to Land Art
related to Arte Povera
related to Minimalism
artisticApproach emphasis on relationships between objects and space
emphasis on viewer perception
site-specific installations
use of minimally altered materials
associatedWith Tama Art University NERFINISHED
Tokyo art scene
coreConcept contingency of perception
encounter between things and space
non-intervention in materials
temporality of installations
countryOfOrigin Japan
emergedInContextOf late-1960s student movements in Japan
postwar Japanese economic growth
field conceptual art
contemporary art
installation art
influenced global contemporary sculpture
later Japanese installation artists
languageOfName Japanese
movementType postwar Japanese art movement
nameMeaning School of Things NERFINISHED
notableMember Jiro Takamatsu NERFINISHED
Katsuro Yoshida NERFINISHED
Kishio Suga NERFINISHED
Koji Enokura NERFINISHED
Kōji Tanaka NERFINISHED
Lee Ufan NERFINISHED
Nobuo Sekine NERFINISHED
Noriyuki Haraguchi NERFINISHED
Shingo Honda NERFINISHED
Susumu Koshimizu NERFINISHED
philosophicalInfluence Eastern philosophy
Zen Buddhism NERFINISHED
phenomenology
reactionTo Japanese high modernist sculpture
Western modernism
typicalMaterials earth
glass
industrial materials
natural materials
steel
stone
wood

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

National Museum of Western Art hasWorkBy Mono-ha artists