- Names
- 実験工房
- JIKKEN KŌBŌ (index name)
- Jikken Kōbō (display name)
- 実験工房 (Japanese display name)
- じっけんこうぼう (transliterated hiragana)
- Experimental Workshop
- Date of birth
- 1951
- Birth place
- Tokyo
- Date of death
- 1957
- Fields of activity
- Painting
- Sculpture
- Printmaking
- Photography
- Video
- Performing Arts
- Media Art
- Poetry
- 2013
- The Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura & Hayama et al. eds. “Jikken Kōbō ten: Sengo geijutsu o kirihiraku (Jikken Kōbō: Experimental Workshop).” [Tokyo]: The Yomiuri Shimbun, The Japan Association of Art Museums, 2013 (Venues: The Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura and Iwaki City Art Museum and The Museum of Modern Art, Toyama and Kitakyushu Municipal Museum of Art, Riverwalk Gallery and Setagaya Art Museum). [Exh. cat.].
Wikipedia
Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: Experimental Workshop) was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its disbandment in 1957, a total of fourteen members participated in the group. Members were typically in their twenties and hailed from different backgrounds – the group included not just visual artists and musicians, but also a printmaker, a lighting designer, an engineer, and others.The famous modern art critic Shūzō Takiguchi was the key mentor and promoter of the group. Jikken Kōbō organized its own exhibitions of group members’ works, which were influenced by Western avant-garde art and showed a strong interest in new technology. However, they are best known for their collaborative “presentations” (happyōkai 発表会): theatrical or musical performances where each member contributed their individual works to create a multimedia production.[3]
- VIAF ID
- 134773090
- ULAN ID
- 500125467
- AOW ID
- b0bb7e71-265a-4099-9396-6e473cd93210
- NDL ID
- 01214501
- Wikidata ID
- Q11452895
- 2024-03-12