
Yutaka Sone was born in 1965 in
Shizuoka, Japan and currently lives in Tokyo and Los Angeles. He holds a B.F.A. and an
M.A. in architecture from Tokyo Geijutsu University. Sone has exhibited his work
throughout Asia, including solo exhibitions at the Art Tower Mito, Mito, Japan (1993);
Roesntgen Kunst Institute, Tokyo, Japan (1995); Mitaka City Arts Foundation, Japan (1996);
Hiroshima Contemporary Art Museum, Japan (1997); Shiseido Art House, Kakegawa, Japan
(1998); AARA, Bangkok, Thailand (1998); and Sogestu Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan (1999). He
participated in 1997 Sculpture Project Munster, the travelling exhibition Cities on the
Move (originating at Wiener Secession, Vienna, Austria in 1997); Unfinished History at the
Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis (1998); and EXPO 2000, Hanover, Germany (2000). The Public
Art Fund in New York has commissioned a major project that will open in 2001. His ArtPace
project is his first institutional solo exhibition in the U.S.
Yutaka Sone takes elements of American culture and pushes them to the extreme with humor
and immediacy. Through video, installation and drawings, he transforms everyday events
into spectacle.
Yutaka Sone was selected for his ArtPace residency by the March 1998 panel consisting of
Dan Cameron, Annette DiMeo Carlozzi, Amada Cruz, Kellie Jones, Hans-Ulrich Obrist, and
Nancy Rubins.
Yutaka Sone brings together entertainment and art, fiction and fantasy in his ArtPace
project. His video, Double Six is a tightly orchestrated production, shot in the Texas
Hill Country. Sone presents an unlikely vision of a cowboy on a horse chasing a helicopter
that carries a pair of enormous dice. As the helicopter flies across the rural landscape,
the dice are released and tumble onto the dusty ground. The cowboy rides off into the
landscape.
Taking a cue from Hollywood Westerns and action movies, Sone landscape is
larger-than-life. Double Six accompanying soundtrack, composed by Yoshio Yamabe, enhances
the video's ironic character, with its retro, easy-listening-meets-Bossanova style.
In the exhibition, the video is accompanied by drawings that document the filmmaking
process, including a large work on cowhide. The drawings highlight aspects of the Western
landscape and the collaborative nature of filmmaking, giving credit to the cast and crew.
Sone is a nomadic artist, and Double Six is certainly informed by the artist's extensive
travels, as well as the dominance of American imagery in media. Western movies, Las Vegas,
and surveillance helicopters all merge into one indelible image. Sone observes the ongoing
myth and promise of the American frontier and processes it into a humorous, engaging
narrative. Sone's flying dice cleverly exaggerates the idea of chance: in the Western
landscape, you win some and you lose some.
Special thanks to David Zwirner Gallery, New York and Asahi Breweries, Ltd.
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