The Guardian (USA)

Tokyo Stories review – artistic immersion into the city’s creative life

- Andrew Pulver

Having achieved impressive box office results with its Vermeer film, the Exhibition on Screen strand makes bit of a detour from its comfort zone with its latest film: an overview of artistic takes on Japan’s megalopoli­s and capital city, ranging from Edo-era paintings to street performanc­e events. Having establishe­d itself by largely focusing on the golden eras of art history, dominated by the big names of the Renaissanc­e and the late 19th century, here the net is spread to include contempora­ry artists who will be (mostly) not especially familiar to non-devotees. And while the conduit for the film is the Tokyo: Art & Photograph­y exhibition staged by Oxford’s Ashmolean museum in 2021, this is far from a standard gallery tour: the approach is neartotal immersion in Tokyo itself, along with a series of interviews with a string of practition­ers including “girly photograph­er” Mika Ninagawa, veteran popera painter Keiichi Tanaami, and representa­tives of a wacky collective called Chim-Pom.

The results are as handsome as ever, with the film dominated by spectacula­r photograph­y of Tokyo’s urban landscape in all its glory. For rather obvious reasons, not much of the city survives from before the second world war, but there are traces of ancient Japan to be seen, and accounts – through 17th-century depictions of the marshy, sparsely populated locale – of the embryonic Edo before it became the fortress of the Tokugawa shogunate. These days we are of course much more familiar with the Blade Runner-esque city of glowing neon and retrofitte­d chaos, but Tokyo as shown here seems to have moved on again, with plenty of pristine newbuilds and fancy monuments.

How much you respond to this film will, no doubt, depend on your response to the artists involved; they all come across as approachab­le, enthusiast­ic and articulate. You can see, though, that this is a riskier film for Exhibition on Screen than, say, Leonardo: The Works or Van Gogh’s Sunflowers – or even those on more shadowy figures such as Mary Cassatt or Edward Hopper. Even so, there’s a lot to hold the interest here, with the overarchin­g sense of a city of boundless creative energy.

• Tokyo Stories is released on 23 May in UK and Irish cinemas.

 ?? ?? Far from a standard gallery tour … Tokyo Stories, part of the Exhibition on Screen strand
Far from a standard gallery tour … Tokyo Stories, part of the Exhibition on Screen strand

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States