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"Home Sweet Home" flyer, designed by Tadao Kawamura
1. Maria Farrar, The room with the terrace, 2021, The National Museum of Art, Osaka
2. Ishu Han, Making Tofu at a place that is not home, 2023, Collection of the artist
3. Umi Ishihara, Gravity and Radience, 2021, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Collection of the artist
4. Yusuke Kamata, Japanese Houses, 2023, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Collection of the artist
5. Lydia Ourahmane, In the Absence of our Mothers, 2018, Installation view Chisenhale Gallery 2018. Commissioned and produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London. Photo: Andy Keate.
6. Kei Takemura, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Courtesy of the artist and Taka Ishii Gallery
7. Andro Wekua, Levan Portrait, 2017, ©Andro Wekua, Courtesy of the artist, Gladstone Gallery, and Take Ninagawa

Home Sweet Home Home Sweet Home

Date: Sat 12 October 2024 - Mon 13 January 2025
Closed: Mondays (except 14 October, 4 November 2024, 13 January 2025), Tue 15 October, Tue 5 November, Wed 25 - Tue 31 December
Hours: 10:00 - 18:00 (Admission until 30 minutes before closing time)

Organized by Marugame Genichiro-Inokuma Museum of Contemporary Art, The MIMOCA Foundation, The National Museum of Art, Osaka

Admission: Adults ¥950, Students (college, university) ¥650, Children (0 year to highschool) free
*Ticket valid for admission to Permanent Collection.
*Free admission day: 23 November 2024

The word “home” evokes a number of different connotations, including house, family (or group of people who have assembled inside a house), and one’s own town or country. Moreover, the title of this exhibition, Home Sweet Home, has often been used to refer to the beloved place that we call home.
During the “stay-at-home” period of the Covid pandemic at the beginning of the 2020s, we had an opportunity to consider the meaning of home, both in a conscious and unconscious manner. And after the refugee crisis that occurred throughout the world grew even more severe due to a variety of international conflicts and other problems, we were forced to reflect on the nature of a homeland or hometown. What does home mean within the context of the bitter social realities we live in?
In this exhibition, we introduce works by a group of contemporary artists, from both Japan and abroad, who address keywords such as history, memory, identity, the places where we belong, and roles. Through these works, we strive to shed light on the meaning of home (as well as the house and family), the regions that we are a part of, and social changes along with concepts such as universality.

Artists
Maria Farrar
Ishu Han
Umi Ishihara
Yusuke Kamata
Lydia Ourahmane
Kei Takemura
Andro Wekua

"Home Sweet Home" flyer, designed by Tadao Kawamura
1. Maria Farrar, The room with the terrace, 2021, The National Museum of Art, Osaka
2. Ishu Han, Making Tofu at a place that is not home, 2023, Collection of the artist
3. Umi Ishihara, Gravity and Radience, 2021, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Collection of the artist
4. Yusuke Kamata, Japanese Houses, 2023, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Collection of the artist
5. Lydia Ourahmane, In the Absence of our Mothers, 2018, Installation view Chisenhale Gallery 2018. Commissioned and produced by Chisenhale Gallery, London. Photo: Andy Keate.
6. Kei Takemura, Home Sweet Home, installation view at The National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2023. Photo by Kazuo Fukunaga, Courtesy of the artist and Taka Ishii Gallery
7. Andro Wekua, Levan Portrait, 2017, ©Andro Wekua, Courtesy of the artist, Gladstone Gallery, and Take Ninagawa

Exhibitions

Related Programs

Performance & Renovating by Kei Takemura
17 November 2024, 14:00 - 16:30
* More details (in Japanese)
Kei Takemura will present a performance titled May I Enter? Scene 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.

Curator Talk
* More details (in Japanese)

MIMOCA Family Day
Sat 19 October 2024 - Sun 20 October 2024
* More details (in Japanese)

Opening Talk
12 October 2024, 10:00 - 18:00 (doors open at 13:30)
* More details (in Japanese)