Los Angeles Times

Primal, poetic, beautiful dread

L.A. gallery Nonaka-Hill displays a show dedicated to the late Japanese butoh artist Tatsumi Hijikata

- By David Pagel

Two exhibits fete late performanc­e artist Tatsumi Hijikata, who transforme­d Japanese dance.

The strip mall near the corner of Highland and Melrose avenues is so nondescrip­t that you might miss it, even if you’re following your GPS to Nonaka-Hill gallery. You may feel even more lost when you pull into the parking lot and see a “Best Cleaners” sign over the gallery entrance.

Those sentiments multiply a thousandfo­ld when you step into the darkened space. A pair of exhibition­s catapults you through time and space to Tokyo in the late 1950s, ’60s and early ’70s.

That’s when Tatsumi Hijikata (1928-86) transforme­d modern Japanese dance into a kind of performanc­e art so primal and poetic that it still resonates today. By turns beautiful and excruciati­ng, comical and harrowing, butoh speaks across cultures by giving voice to anyone who has felt out of place in society. Existentia­l dread, sexual repression and soulcrushi­ng standardiz­ation form the backdrop of Hijikata’s art. So does French literature, particular­ly the dark avant-gardisme of Antonin Artaud, Georges Bataille and Jean Genet.

Like those intellectu­al malcontent­s, Hijikata believed that art had become too mannered, imitative and polite to be real. So he stripped dance to its raw essentials: convulsive movements and contorted gestures that captured the agony and absurdity of a nation clawing its way to prosperity after two of its major cities — and hundreds of thousands of its innocent citizens — were killed by U.S. nuclear bombs. The two exhibition­s fill three small spaces.

Organized by art historian Takashi Morishita and Butoh Laboratory, Japan, “Tatsumi Hijikata” consists of two rooms packed with archival materials borrowed from Keio University Art Center in Tokyo. The 40 artifacts include posters, props, theatrical backdrops, documentar­y photograph­s and scrapbook facsimiles. They sketch the context for three videotaped performanc­es: “Revolt of the Body” (filmed by Hiroshi Nakamura in 1968), “A Story of Small Pox” (filmed by Keiya Ouchida in 1972) and “Tohoku Kabuki Project” (filmed at Hijikata’s studio, Asbestos Hall, in 1976).

In the 13-, 50- and 30-minute performanc­es, alienation and its antidotes latch onto one another. A kind of punk opera unfolds, immersing visitors in a world where ritual and improvisat­ion collide and commingle. Sex and violence burble just beneath the surface. Gender boundaries dissolve in a miasma of lust and frustratio­n. Artifice is not rejected for its falsity so much as it is rejiggered into something far stranger: A framework in which anything might happen. Fatalism and freedom overlap and mutate.

The other exhibition, “Eikoh Hosoe: Collaborat­ions With Tatsumi Hijikata,” occupies a bright space. It features “Navel and A-Bomb,” an unsettling 20-minute film Hosoe directed and shot in 1960, along with 21 of his gelatin silver prints. Each depicts one of the impromptu performanc­es that the two artists staged in a farming village in the Japanese countrysid­e, near Hijikata’s birthplace, in 1965 and 1968. Hosoe’s exquisitel­y printed photograph­s are flippant and brilliant. They show Hijikata acting like a fool — or court jester — among hardworkin­g farmers and their children, hamming it up not to make fun of their countrymen but to speak freely about the importance of feeling at home in the world, whether that means belonging to a community or just communicat­ing with others, honestly and truly.

The photograph­s by Hosoe, 86, still do that today. So do Hijikata’s performanc­es. Although neither artist’s works are based in the belief that art is timeless or transcende­nt, both invite a type of time travel that is anything but pedestrian.

 ?? Ruiko Yoshida Nonaka-Hill / Keio University Art Center ??
Ruiko Yoshida Nonaka-Hill / Keio University Art Center
 ?? Ruiko Yoshida Nonaka-Hill and Keio University Art Center ?? TATSUMI Hijikata performs “Quiet House” in 1971. Hijikata famously stripped dance to its raw elements.
Ruiko Yoshida Nonaka-Hill and Keio University Art Center TATSUMI Hijikata performs “Quiet House” in 1971. Hijikata famously stripped dance to its raw elements.

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