This paper explores the Japan Ushimado International Art Festival held in Okayama
Prefecture, Ushimado, every year from 1984 to 1992. Few papers have focused on
the Japan Ushimado International Art Festival; moreover, art historians have not
comprehensively explored this festival. Therefore, I clarify this festival as a whole
through materials collected and interviews of the concerned people. I also examine
this art historical condition. Furthermore, I consider the transformation and context of
open-air art exhibitions in the 1980s Japan.
Analyzing the content every time, we can determine the response to the problem of
the transformation of “art work” and “display,” the dilemma of traditional large-scale
art exhibitions in central Tokyo, finding that Japanese warehouses (Kura) as well as
hills and harbors were being transformed into spaces for this exhibition. On the other
hand, this festival references Ushimado’s local culture. Thus, the transformation of
“art exhibition” such as the Japan Ushimado International Art Festival reflects not only
the expansion of “art” but also the problem of the institution of “art.” This perspective
indicates the aspect of post-modern Japan that cannot be overlooked.
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