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From “Phase Conception” to “Void Phase-Skin”

関根 伸夫 Nobuo SEKINE

2025.3.29 – 2025.5.04

Shanghai

From Phase Conception to Void Phase-Skin
  —— Exhibition of Mono-ha Master Nobuo Sekine’s Paintings

Nobuo Sekine’s Phase-Mother Earth was first realized in October 1968 at Suma Rikyu Park in Kobe, marking the origin of Japan’s Mono-ha movement. AAEF Art Center is hosting the exhibition The Origins of Mono-ha: Focusing on Phase-Mother Earth. The first-floor gallery presents a large-scale hanging image of the same size as the original work Phase-Mother Earth (photography by Osamu Murai), while the second-floor documentation gallery also displays reproduced images of Phase-Mother Earth on the exhibition wall.

As an extension of the exhibition, we have specially curated a satellite show dedicated to Nobuo Sekine’s painting, highlighting two of the most intellectually compelling series in his artistic career: Phase Conception, an early body of work that embodies conceptual burst, and Void Phase-Skin, a later series that reflects profound philosophical depth.

Sekine provided a detailed account of his early Phase Conception series, in which he integrated topological space, Zen thought, and zero-sum game theory, building upon and extending the ideas of Conceptual Art, Minimalism, as well as the philosophies of Lucio Fontana and Yves Klein. In these series, he juxtaposed rupture, collage, and incision on a single canvas, allowing washi paper to evolve naturally in water and air, while layers of washi were covered with gold leaf and graphite to create an interplay of yin and yang.

However, the conceptual art artists’ statements and art critical reviews have largely focused on Phase-Mother Earth, while the critical framework surrounding Phase Conception has remained underexplored — even more so for the later Void Phase-Skin series.

This satellite exhibition brings these two series to light, aiming to reintroduce Sekine’s reflections on Minimalism, action painting, space and time, as well as the yin-yang dualism of Eastern philosophy, thereby reviving a chapter of art history that has long been overshadowed.

In the post-pandemic era, as the world faces uncertainties— with the United States entering Trump’s second term, Korea’s president imprisoned, and the rapid rise of AI — what insights do the beginnings and endings of Sekine’s works offer us? Ultimately, in this zero-sum game, what have we lost, and what have we gained?

A fundamental question of existence is posed to those of us who remain. After all, isn’t a great work of art, at its core, an exceptional question?

 

Shun at Tokyo Studio

 

 

About the artist

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Nobuo SEKINE

1942  Born in Saitama prefecture, Japan

1968  Obtained B.F.A of Tama Art University, where he studied under the artists Saito Yoshishige and Jiro Takamatsu. Since graduation, he has worked actively as the central figure of Mono-ha in international exhibitions.

Mono-ha School, a Japanese art school of the late 1960s and early 1970s, emphasized the relationship between objects and space, and the extreme restraint of “plastic art”.

1968  “Phase-Mother Earth” created by the artistis widely considered to be the origin of the Mono-ha movement, and it was also one of the most representative Japanese art creations at that time, and had a significant influence on the future development of land art, installation, and minimalist art in Asia.

Nobuo Sekine’s work is deeply inspired by Zen philosophy, combining the theory of topology with artistic experimentation. By disposing matters to continuous change in form while retaining its natural quality, he seeks to unveil the intrinsic quality of matters through varying perspectives, which in turn questions interrelation between the matters and audience as the change takes place. His works include land art, installations of natural and industrial materials, and graphic creations that explore the medium of painting.

Nobuo Sekine represented Japan in the 35th Venice Biennale in 1970 with the series of “Phase of Nothingness”, and later participated in biennales held in France, Japan and South Korea. In 2001, in recognition of Nobuo Sekine’s contribution to Japanese modern art, Tate Modern organized his works into the exhibition “Century City”.

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