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You’d think that a New Yorker wouldn’t succumb easily to urban claustrophobia. But when I finally got to the fields and mountains of rural southern Japan — three trains and four hours later — the sense of relief and calm I felt were palpable. I was making a pilgrimage to Naoshima (pronounced NOW-she-muh), an island […]
Turrell-Ando house (by fleshmeatdoll/flickr)
The other major project on Naoshima is a collective work-in-progress, and also pretty wonderful. Each of six more or less traditional wooden houses in the quiet, dense old town, a five minute drive from the Benesse compound, have been given over to artists to transform as they wish. And my favorite of those is a collaboration by Ando and Turrell: eight of us at a time were led into the house, which was absolutely pitch black.After five or ten minutes of sitting in silence as our eyes adjusted to the darkness, we were instructed beforehand, we’d see a light, which we weretotry to touch. The light, as it turned out, was one of the house’s four interior walls, and navigating through the darkness with strangers to reach toward it was, once again, a singular and, yes, sublime experience.It’s funny: if I didn’t know who the artist was — not just an American, but a cowboyish Arizonan — I’d have assumed these works were by some native genius. They seem so entirely… Japanese.– Kurt Andersen