User:CosmosInATeaBowl/Hitoshi Nomura

Hitoshi Nomura (Nomura Hitoshi, 野村仁) is a Japanese contemporary artist, born in 1945 in Hyōgo Prefecture.

While he initially trained in sculpture, his work has developed into ephemeral, processual and conceptual forms of artworks. The central theme of his work, a figure around which he will experiment throughout his life, is time, and the dynamics of transformation that are linked to it, such as deterioration, evaporation, fusion. In the 1970s, he defined the theme of his work as the attempt to "represent the characteristics of time and space in equal prominence" through his art. The use of photography in his work is decisive, whether this medium is used to document his action or to "sculpt time".

Education and early works
Nomura graduated in 1967 from the Kyoto City University of Arts (京都市立芸術大学) sculpture department. However, from his graduation exhibition, which was shown in 1969 in front of the Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, the artist has manifested an interest in a particular dimension of sculpture, time. This work, entitled Tardiology (1968-69) is composed of 4 large boxes, stacked during an action on March 18, 1969. In contrast to the monumental perennial works in the public space, this work envisaged its own end, the fall of the structure under its own weight. Tardiology's process of self-deconstruction was gradual, due to exposure to weather elements. The name of the work refers, according to the artist, to the neologism of "theory of lag", highlighting the gap between current experience and the perception of time as a series of discrete events.

With his early works, such as Tardiology, Nomura began to turn away from the object per se to the passage of time, the foundations of matter and the rhythms of the universe. Persistence and repetition over long periods of time are the central characteristics of his process. As early as 1969, Nomura began making films and sound pieces using oxygen, dry ice and other materials that are more often associated with science than art. Rather than presenting a fully realized object in advance, Nomura consciously pursued a process of change, with the installation of the work being only "the starting point" of a structure that "gravity, wind, rain and time" will gradually break down.

Photography-as-documentation-as-artwork approach
Following the example of several Japanese artist collectives, such as The Play, or the mail-art group Psychopsysiology Research Institute, his processual practice mobilizes documentation (photographic and videographic capture, texts), in an enlarged conception of the artwork. The event that triggered his reflection was the fall of boxes containing his works. Subsequently stored under his eaves and exposed to the natural elements, the boxes deteriorated. From this experience, he began to work around the process of alteration and the theme of the passage of time became central to his work.

Nomura is recognized as one of the first Japanese to use photography in an artistic context. This is particularly evident in the works he produced in the late 1960s. To give a time frame, in 1968 the first issue of the experimental magazine Provoke was published. Nomura created installations directly in natural spaces and photographed them, respecting a certain interval between each shot in order to document their natural decomposition. Photography was the most effective medium for documenting the artist's ephemeral actions such as Tardiology (1968-69), a cardboard structure frozen in its collapse, Dry Ice (1970), evaporating ice cubes.In the continuation of this practice of documentation, and developing it to its paroxysm, Nomura recorded the whole day, using his phone and a camera.

Dry Ice (1970)
His Dry Ice series is particularly important in the process of legitimizing documentation as a work of art by art institutions. Indeed, while the piece appears at first glance to be a gimmick of the conceptual art forms in vogue in the 1960s/70s, of which Nomura was aware, it differs radically in its emphasis on the physical phenomenon of fusion, of the evaporation of matter, and its role as an artist witnessing and archiving this process. Indeed, once the blocks of ice were arranged in space, on a long blackboard, the artist weighed and dated them. Then, once a photograph was taken, he would move them and re-inscribe the time and their new weight. In 1970, on the occasion of the "10th International Art Exhibition of Japan (Tokyo Biennale '70) Between Man and Matter", at the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Nomura exhibited a series of 10 photographs of Dry Ice. The series was recognized as an artwork, both as an action and as a documentation, which was a novelty at that time. Few artists kept records of their performances, and even fewer were interested in photographing these events, which they often delegated to others. The photographs of the Japanese artist group Hi Red Center cleaning the street can be cited as some of the earliest documentation of performance art. This recognition of photographic recording as an integral part of the artistic process is concomitant with the growing, though still fragile in 1970, institutionalization of contemporary art (gendai bijutsu) in Japan.

"Moon" score (1975-)
The photographic medium was also used by Nomura Hitoshi for its own qualities and as a means of sculpting time. This new perspective of work is concomitant with a new scale of observation. Indeed, in series such as "moon" score (1975-) and Earth Rotation (1978-79), Nomura uses, in addition to cameras, sophisticated telescopes and computers to record the passage of time, and the movements of stars and planets. In the Moon score series, Nomura photographed the movements of the moon each night between December 1975 and June 1979. Each night constitutes 34 shots as well as 2 images of a meteorological journal including the date, the moon's phase, moonrise and moonset. These images are presented as black and white contact prints as well as large scale black and white prints. Each shot has been overexposed with several lines constituting a musical staff. Thus, some plates became musical scores (the moon materializing a musical note), were interpreted by orchestras and became autonomous musical pieces.

Sometimes the moon is not taken in focus, Nomura using a tripodless camera and a super-zoom, resulting in a blur of movement. For Nomura, this is all the more conducive to generating musicality.

Ten-Year Photobook or the Brownian Motion of Eyesight (1972-1982)
Between 1972 and 1982, Nomura photographed everything he could see, in his daily life, in order to make 100 feet of silver film, each month. These images were published as a series, in the form of 120 hardcover tomes, one per month, containing 21 frames in each page, and entitled Ten-Year Photobook or the Brownian Motion of Eyesight. This piece could be exhibited in different formats as well, notably as a film projection, showing then 4 frames per second, under the title The Brownian Motion of Eyesight. This diversity in the monstration of this piece allows Nomura to open up temporalities, to no longer privilege a single typology of temporality, neither that of the cinema, nor that of the photographic decisive moment.

Art and science
Nomura said in an interview that as a young student he loved nature and planned to study science until he "succumbed to temptation" and studied art instead. If his early work can be understood as relating to the series of far-flung experiments that have been grouped under the rubric of global conceptual art, corresponding to the phenomenon described by scholar Reiko Tomii by the term "international contemporaneity ", Nomura's path was based on his own combination of art and science, seeking to blur the lines between the two disciplines.

In 1980, Nomura began making daytime exposures (the Analemma series) that followed the sun across the sky; in doing so, he observed the phenomenon of the contrast between concave and convex lines over the course of a year. The photographic repetition accentuates the symbolic significance of this phenomenon of endless regeneration. As part of his interest in the sun, Nomura has been collecting asteroids for the past two decades and has also been building and racing solar-powered cars since 1993.

This exploration of Nomura towards the sun, the stars and the cosmos, is decisive for understanding the movement of his artistic approach, which links the specific with the infinite, putting perception at the center of his experiments with space, time and matter : “I’m interested in the forces of nature. My art gives my observations of those forces visible form. The Earth itself is the greatest timepiece; it is its own best timekeeper .”