New essay by Nina Horisaki-Christens: Video as Biological Cycle: Ko Nakajima’s Ecological Vision
Ann Adachi-Tasch
We are very happy to welcome researcher Nina Horisaki-Christens as a CCJ collaborator starting with the republication of her essay on Ko Nakajima, “Video as Biological Cycle: Ko Nakajima’s Ecological Vision.”
Nina Horisaki-Christens
Nina Horisaki-Christens is an art historian, curator, translator, and PhD Candidate in the Department of Art History and Archaeology and the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University (NY). She was a 2017-18 Fulbright Graduate Research Fellow and a visiting researcher at the Institute of Comparative Culture at Sophia University from 2017-2019, where she investigated the development of video practices by Tokyo-based artists in the 1970s. She assisted with the Japan Society's 2019 exhibition "Made in Tokyo: Architecture & Living, 1964/2020," served as Research Assistant for "Gutai: Splendid Playground" at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (2013), was a 2012-13 Helena Rubinstein Curatorial Fellow in the Whitney Museum's Independent Study Program, and previously worked as Assistant Curator and Interim Programs Manager at Art in General. She has also contributed to publications produced by ArtAsiaPacific, Art Tower Mito, the Mori Art Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, ArtPhil, Takuro Someya Gallery, Art in General, and Hyperallergic, and produced translations for Josai University's Review of Japanese Culture and Society, Bunka-cho Art Platform Japan (forthcoming), and Tokyo Opera City, among others.
This essay was originally published in:
Pleating Machine 3: Introduction to Archives XIX Ko Nakajima–MY LIFE catalogue (KUAC-C 41)
Edited by Hitoshi Kubo (Keio University Art Center). Editing Support by Ryosuke Yamakoshi, Shinpei Tsunefuka, Kahlua Tsunoda, Shiho Hasegawa. Designed by Hitoshi Kubo. Printed by Digital Graphic Co.,Ltd.. Paper is Kozupika by Yoshimori Co.,Ltd.. Published by Keio University Art Center. 108-8345 2-15-45 Mita Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan. Tel.03-5427-1621 © 9th Sep. 2019 | Keio University Art Center