Lethbridge Herald

Naoshima transforme­d into destinatio­n for art lovers

- Donna Bryson

Because I had just emerged from the gloom of a tree-lined approach, the white stones that paved the courtyard seemed impossibly bright. Then, my eyes caught something unexpected: a flight of chunky glass steps, a very modern touch on a renovated shrine.

Encounteri­ng surprising and beautiful juxtaposit­ions defined my visit to Japan’s Naoshima, a small island that Pritzker Prizewinni­ng architect Tadao Ando has helped transform into a destinatio­n for lovers of contempora­ry art and design.

My trip to Naoshima was something of an Ando pilgrimage. I’d admired the work of the Japanese-born, internatio­nally known Ando at the Art Institute of Chicago, where he created a powerfully contemplat­ive gallery for Japanese screens using simple pillars and lines of light and shadow. My daughter came up with the phrase “art-itecture” during our visit to Naoshima because we focused so much of our attention on Ando’s buildings, and less on the artworks they house.

For a 1989 festival, Ando designed a campground where the public could contemplat­e art and Naoshima’s natural beauty. In 1992, an Andodesign­ed hotel-and-art complex opened, Benesse House. It’s a dream come true for those of us who have always wanted to spend the night in a museum. I got a thrill passing one of Hiroshi Sugimoto’s extraordin­ary photograph­s of theatres on my way to breakfast the two mornings I spent at Benesse House.

The hotel complex, which includes a seaside sculpture park, also is home to work by, among others, Jennifer Bartlett, Jonathan Borofsky, David Hockney, Bruce Nauman, Niki de Saint Phalle, Frank Stella and Andy Warhol. A giant spotted pumpkin by Yayoi Kusama that sits on a pier jutting into the Seto Inland Sea has become a mascot for the enterprise. Anyone can view the art, but hotel guests get after-hours access.

Over the next decades, Ando designed several more buildings for Naoshima, including additional suites of rooms for Benesse House, with the most exclusive connected to the main galleries by monorail.

Perhaps the most stunning of Ando’s structures is the Chichu Art Museum, which opened in 2004. Chichu means undergroun­d, and the galleries are buried into a hillside so that they become part of the island’s dramatic landscape. Yet the spaces are filled with natural light. A Claude Monet painting of water lilies hangs in a room over a floor of white stone cubes that reminded me of the bright stones in the shrine courtyard elsewhere on the island. Chichu also houses installati­ons by James Turrell and Walter De Maria.

In another Ando museum on Naoshima, dark hallways lead like journeys to the revelation­s contained in the precise paintings and bold stone and steel sculptures of Lee Ufan, who was born in Korea and establishe­d himself as a leading figure in Japanese contempora­ry art.

Ando got a museum of his own on Naoshima in 2013. The architect set a concrete box inside a century-old house in Naoshima’s Honmura area. The house literally and figurative­ly embraces exhibition­s on Ando’s work, which is rooted in the simplicity of traditiona­l design and casts an admiring glance at ancient craftsmans­hip. The museum is a short bus or bike ride from Benesse House.

The Honmura neighbourh­ood also is home to another Benesse initiative, the Art House Project launched in 1998. Artists have made galleries and installati­ons out of abandoned homes, temples, a dentist’s office and a hangout for players of the board game Go.

Benesse House is named for Japan’s Benesse Corp., whose holdings include Berlitz, the language education company. Benesse founder Tetsuhiko Fukutake bought land on Naoshima as a base to explore ideas about nurturing children and worked with locals on projects linking economic and cultural developmen­t. He died in 1985, but his son, Soichiro, a collector of contempora­ry art, took his father’s vision further, saying in an online welcome message that the island is “a place where art is not experience­d by studying set attitudes but appreciate­d on your own terms.”

Naoshima is craggily scenic, and so densely forested that the trees and ferns compete with sand for footholds along the shore. Before it became an arts destinatio­n, its economy centred on salt, fishing and manufactur­ing.

The glass steps that caught my eye are part of an Art House Project renovation of an Edo period shrine by Sugimoto. The steps link the hilltop shrine to an undergroun­d stone chamber. The glass stairs echoed timber risers I occasional­ly saw dug into the surroundin­g hills to ease the way for pedestrian­s. More than occasional­ly, I spotted humble roadside Shinto shrines at which the faithful had left flowers and other offerings. Seeing them, it was easy to imagine the island and its artitectur­e teeming with spirits.

If You Go. . .

NAOSHIMA, JAPAN:

Benesse Art Site Naoshima:

GETTING THERE: Fly or take a high-speed bullet train to Okayama; then 45 minutes by bus, taxi or train to Uno Port for a 20-minute ferry to Naoshima.

GETTING AROUND: Benesse House guests can take a hopon, hop-off courtesy bus from art site to art site, and from the ferry port to the hotel. A walking map available at the Naoshima ferry port shows bus routes.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? This photo shows a view of the coastline of Japan’s Naoshima island. Architectu­re, museums and art installati­ons have turned the island into a destinatio­n for lovers of contempora­ry art and design.
Associated Press photo This photo shows a view of the coastline of Japan’s Naoshima island. Architectu­re, museums and art installati­ons have turned the island into a destinatio­n for lovers of contempora­ry art and design.
 ??  ?? This photo shows a detail of "The Secret of the Sky," a marble sculpture by Kan Yasuda in a gallery at Benesse House, a Tadao Ando-designed museum that doubles as a hotel on Japan's Naoshima island. Ando has helped transform Naoshima into a destinatio­n...
This photo shows a detail of "The Secret of the Sky," a marble sculpture by Kan Yasuda in a gallery at Benesse House, a Tadao Ando-designed museum that doubles as a hotel on Japan's Naoshima island. Ando has helped transform Naoshima into a destinatio­n...
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 ??  ?? This photo shows elegant chairs as a place to rest and contemplat­e in a gallery at Benesse House, a Tadao Ando-designed museum that doubles as a hotel on Japan's Naoshima island.
This photo shows elegant chairs as a place to rest and contemplat­e in a gallery at Benesse House, a Tadao Ando-designed museum that doubles as a hotel on Japan's Naoshima island.

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