The fifth version of Artwork Week Tokyo (AWT), which befell 5-9 November, introduced town’s business galleries and museums to the fore, highlighting Japan’s artwork scene towards a backdrop of shifting nationwide politics.
Final month Sanae Takaichi, the chief of the ruling Liberal Democratic Social gathering, was elected as Japan’s prime minister, making her the primary lady to carry the workplace. This variation of management was met with a blended response by the Japanese artwork world, with some highlighting that tax incentives, worldwide promotion programmes, an improved cultural sector infrastructure and stronger public collections will probably be wanted to present artists, collectors, and galleries a way of encouragement.
The artwork market in Japan collapsed in 1990 after collectors invested closely in Fashionable and Impressionist artwork. Different worldwide centres and markets resembling Hong Kong and New York subsequently accelerated as Japan’s financial system floundered. Since then, the nation has remained what The Artwork Newspaper’s editor-at-large Georgina Adam has known as the “sleeping magnificence” of the artwork world.
A hybrid post-art truthful mannequin
Nonetheless, at Artwork Week Tokyo, which has positioned itself as a “post-art truthful” mannequin, the temper appeared buoyant. With greater than 50 establishments collaborating throughout Tokyo, masking areas resembling Roppongi and Marunouchi, VIPs and the general public alike hopped forwards and backwards throughout the metropolis, visiting small business galleries and established artwork establishments by way of free shuttle buses.
The director and co-founder of the annual showcase, Atsuko Ninagawa, says that the week is meant to activate the market in Tokyo, whereas nonetheless selling a real art-focused, non-profit ethos. “The imaginative and prescient has all the time been the identical. I constructed [AWT] as a hybrid platform to attach establishments, galleries, and various audiences,” she explains.
“AWT isn’t just a market platform. We’d like to have extra artwork professionals from exterior Japan attend as a lot as we’d wish to see extra collectors from the area, resembling these from Better China.”
Although not solely a market platform, AWT is organised in collaboration with Artwork Basel, with funding offered by the Tokyo Metropolitan Authorities and Japan’s Company for Cultural Affairs. The partnership with the mega-fair model is mutually helpful, enabling each events to share VIP contacts and experience, and permitting the truthful to faucet right into a pool of burgeoning Japanese collectors.
“The collaboration with Artwork Basel developed organically from conversations about how they might contribute to the expansion of the regional artwork scene, and our relationship has been outlined by mutual respect and change,” Ninagawa explains. “I believe they perceive {that a} sturdy artwork scene in Tokyo advantages the entire area.”
With this in thoughts, AWT’s focus goes past the business, additionally internet hosting museum reveals below its umbrella. The centrepiece exhibition, What’s Actual? on the Okura Museum of Artwork, is that this yr’s AWT Focus occasion. Curated by Adam Szymczyk, the creative director of Documenta 14 (2017), the present contains greater than 100 works obtainable on the market by over 50 artists, who ruminate on the notion of actuality in artwork within the age of synthetic intelligence.

Tsubaki Noboru’s Esthetic Air pollution, 1990, is on present on the the Nationwide Artwork Middle, Tokyo, as a part of Prism of the Actual: Making Artwork in Japan 1989-2010
© Tsubaki Noboru. Picture SAIKI Taku, Courtesy of twenty first Century Museumof Up to date Artwork, Kanazawa
One other museum present, Prism of the Actual: Making Artwork in Japan 1989-2010 on the Nationwide Artwork Middle, Tokyo, is a “must-see”, in keeping with the director of the Mori Artwork Museum, Mami Kataoka. Caroline Ferreira, a former curator on the Centre Pompidou in Paris, in addition to many AWT company, seem to share this opinion.
Ferreira says: “The present, co-produced with M+ Museum in Hong Kong, was glorious, giving guests a very good overview of the Japanese artwork scene on the finish of the Nineteen Nineties…I additionally actually loved discovering that so many essential artists from the US got here to Japan at one level for residencies resembling Joan Jonas, Sharon Lockhart and David Hammons.”
Native scene, international context
Collaborating galleries, who don’t pay a price to participate in AWT, have equally constructive issues to say in regards to the occasion. “Quite than confining itself to a single venue or truthful, AWT permits guests to expertise Tokyo’s various artwork scenes firsthand, from unbiased galleries to institutional areas,” says Seiko Mbako, a spokesperson for SpaceUn, which is exhibiting a collection of works by African diaspora artists with worth factors starting from ¥147,000 ($954) to ¥14.3m ($92,400).
Akiko Horiuchi of Gallery38, which presents a solo exhibition by the ceramicist Eiji Uematsu (The place the sprouts come from, till 14 December), is equally upbeat, describing the occasion’s worldwide attain as “extraordinarily invaluable”. Nonetheless, she shouldn’t be with out concern, including: “For a small gallery like ours, collaborating in abroad artwork festivals may be fairly difficult, each financially and logistically…The response to the exhibition has been very constructive to date, though gross sales are one other story.”
On a macro stage, nevertheless, the outlook for the Japanese artwork market is constructive. Based on a current report, it grew by 11% to an estimated $681m between 2019 to 2023, whereas the worldwide market noticed simply 1% progress throughout the identical interval.
Shinji Nanzuka, the founding father of Nanzuka gallery, nevertheless, nonetheless favours a global outlook. “AWT permits Tokyo to be seen not merely as an area scene, however inside a worldwide context,” says the gallerist, who’s exhibiting the Abaco collection by the Japanese sculptor Haroshi, priced between $3,000 and $25,000.
“My gallery has lengthy labored with artists rising from road tradition and illustration. I see AWT as a vital platform the place such boundary-crossing practices can join with the broader worldwide artwork world.”
He additionally believes that the cooling of an overheated market has its advantages—particularly a renewed deal with core creative values. “We’re seeing extra collectors who deal with these fundamentals, and a youthful era of artists who’re constructing their practices with a grounded, long-term perspective,” he explains. “In different phrases, it is a second when market normalisation and generational renewal are taking place concurrently.”
On the subject of Japan’s political future, nevertheless, there’s much less certainty amongst gallerists. “It’s nonetheless too early to know something,” says Gallery38’s Horiuchi. “There hasn’t been a lot point out of cultural coverage but. I can solely hope that Takaichi will take an curiosity in supporting and selling artwork and tradition in Japan.”
