Art Object Gallery

Art Object Gallery the ArtObjectGallery is a unique combination of art studios, zendo, and art gallery showing the best of the Bay Area Contemporary Visual arts.

Please call or email for an appointment Housed in what was one a walnut processing plant the ArtObjectGallery is nearly 2400 sqft of white walled, track-lit exhibition space where the work of painters, sculptors, printmakers, photographers, glass blowers and ceramicists from around the Bay Area and beyond can be seen, appreciated and purchased. The ArtObjectGallery is also available for events, me

etings, as well as independently curated shows, by the day, week, or longer. Call or email for rates and availability.

05/11/2023

TheArtObject (TAO) Gallery will be opening the gates on Thursday, May 18th at 7:30 PM for a gathering of folks to look at art, hang out with friends and spend some time together. You are welcome to bring something to share such as snacks and liquid refreshments, but don't feel obligated. Just bring yourself. It will be good to see you!

Hakone Gardens is hosting an exhibition of work by Ken Matsumoto from now until June. The reception for the artist is pl...
01/30/2022

Hakone Gardens is hosting an exhibition of work by Ken Matsumoto from now until June. The reception for the artist is planned for 20 February from 2:00 to 4:00 PM. RSVP is required.

You can see the exhibit any time. Please check the Hakone Gardens website for hours and admission fees.

Stone Sculpture: Ken Matsumoto
January 2022 - June 2022

Hakone Foundation is proud to present stunning and beautiful sculptures crafted by a San Jose local artist. Ken Matsumoto has been working with stone slabs, concrete, glass and steel since 1976. The exhibition presents his stone sculpture works.

06/19/2019

A four-person show at ArtObjectGallery shows work by artists dealing with, in part, the legacies of the Tule Lake and Topaz concentration camps.

06/18/2019

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Transient Existence | June 21, 2019 – July 14, 2019

We are not eternal, we are mortal
We can move through space, but cannot travel through time
We are only transient beings
We desire, therefore, to connect the dots through time by visiting several spaces

Four Japanese Artists have all lived as immigrants in either England, Germany, or the United States. Although they had met each other at different times in Germany, they had never assembled as one group before their reunion in the United States in 2018 where they shared their experiences of living outside Japan, in foreign countries. At their reunion, they shared their experiences, alternating between life in Japan and abroad. Through these discussions, they found common ground: they all have “transient existences,” a term, they realized, applies to them both as immigrants and as mortal beings.
ArtObjectGallery
592 N. 5th Street, San Jose, CA 95112 408-288-9305, 408-384-1610

Artists: Aisuke Kondo, Takeshi Moro, Yukiko Nagakura, Kaori Yamash*ta

Opening reception: June 21, (Fri) 5pm-8pm
Hours: Sat & San, Noon-5pm and by appointment
In this show, four Japanese artists express their artworks based on interdisciplinary approaches: historical research, fieldwork, and artistic methodology.
Aisuke Kondo
was born and raised in Japan and currently based in Germany. Kondo explores questions of belonging, identity, memory, and history across a variety of media, from collage and gallery installation to video and performance. In 2008, he completed a Meisterschüler in Fine Art at Berlin University of Arts. After his graduation, he received a grant from the Asian Cultural Council to research his great-grandfather who was incarcerated at Topaz concentration camp in Utah during World War II. Currently, he is working in the Bay Area on a grant from the Cultural Affairs Agency in Japan as a visiting scholar at San Francisco State University. In his current “Matter and Memory” series (2017-present), Kondo retraces his great-grandfather’s life as an immigrant in the US from his arrival in the early 1900s. Kondo has had solo exhibitions at Gallery Turnaround, Sendai, Japan (2018), Kommunale Galerie Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Berlin (2018), MINTMOUE, Los Angeles (2017) TAM - Tokyo Art Museum, Tokyo (2016) and Kyoto Art Center, Kyoto (2016).
Takeshi Moro
was born in Fukaya, Japan and spent most of his childhood in the UK. Moro attended Brown University, where he double majored in Economics and Visual Arts. He worked in the fields of corporate finance before receiving his M.F.A. from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Moro's work primarily utilizes lens-based media, such as photography and video. For the past decade, he has focused on working with communities and the collaborative process of art making. He is currently Associate Professor of Art and Art History at Santa Clara University. He is the founder and director of tmoro projects, a 501(c)(3) non-profit community art space in the Bay Area. He has participated in fellowships and residencies in Finland, Germany, Iceland, Japan, and South Korea. Moro’s work has been exhibited internationally, including solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago (2011) and Serlachius Museot, Finland (2013).
Yukiko Nagakura
was born in Shizuoka, Japan, and currently works and lives in Berlin, Germany. As a visual artist working on installation and performance, Nagakura’s interest include ecology and gender issues. Following the tragic Fukushima nuclear disaster in 2011, Nagakura moved to Europe, where she was a guest student in Hito Steyerl’s classes at University of Art, Berlin. In 2017 Nagakura completed a Master of Art under the supervision of Alice Creischer and Andreas Siekmann in Fine Art and Political Theory at the department of Spatial Strategies at the Weißensee School of Art in Berlin. Her artwork reflects her multidisciplinary and holistic approach to art in taking into consideration social, political, and cultural issues, and in particular, the question of gender inequality in Japan. Her work has been exhibited at institutions and project spaces such as Atelierhaus Australische Botschaft (Berlin, 2018), Weißensee School of Art (Berlin, 2016), Neue Galerie Landshut (Landshut, 2015). Additionally, she has performed with several artists who also engaged in a social, political, and cultural interpretation of modern art.
Kaori Yamash*ta
was born and raised in Japan and currently based in San Francisco. Her site-specific installations consist of elements such as sculptural objects, drawings, photographs, etc. They are usually placed in a particular environment in a rather unexpected yet precise way that makes each element purposely relate with each other, and hold a quality that could blur the confidence within the existence of physical matter. Recent exhibitions include: Remote Ancestors, Bass & Reiner, San Francisco (2017), Leaves Without Routes, Nanmoncyo323, Taipei (2016), letter from the distant beyond, Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2015), Image of the Memory, Memory of the Image, BankART NYK, Yokohama (2014), Under Thread, Aomori Contemporary Art Centre (2007), First Steps: Emerging Artists from Japan, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York (2003), among others. She will be exhibiting at the Museum of Craft and Design, San Francisco, July through December, 2019.

Address

592 N 5th Street
San Jose, CA
95112

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