Ñåòü òóðèñòè÷åñêèõ àãåíòñòâ
RGB TOUR
Ðàáîòàåì ñ 1999 ãîäà
Ïí-ïò ñ 11:00 äî 18:00
Ñá ñ 11:00 äî 16:00 (äèñòàíöèîííî)

Rie Tachikawa Interview Full [OFFICIAL]

(Long silence) Then the wind will sit in the chair. The wind has been waiting for a long time. It deserves a rest.

American Minimalism is about geometry and the object’s relationship to the viewer’s body. It is mathematical. Japanese "Ma" is about the interval . It is the silence between two claps. The empty space inside a bamboo joint. Minimalism says: Look at this thing. Ma says: Look at what is not there. In my 2021 piece, Wind Score , I hung 1,000 sheets of rice paper from the ceiling. No glue. No weights. The artwork was not the paper. The artwork was the moment the door opened, the air shifted, and the papers breathed. That breath—that interval—is Ma.

(She picks up a glass of water from the table). This glass is half full. An optimist says it is half full. A pessimist says it is half empty. I say: Look at the space above the water, where the air lives. That space is filled with potential. In a gallery, people rush to the object. I want them to rush to the shadow behind the object. I learned this from kintsugi —the art of repairing broken pottery with gold. Everyone stares at the gold vein. But the gold is just the map. The true story is the break itself. The moment of dropping. The gasp. That is where the life is. Part 3: The Creative Process – "Controlled Neglect" I: Let’s talk about process. Your installations often look... precarious. Broken. Dusty. Is that aesthetic intentional? rie tachikawa interview full

No. I am a questioner . A story gives answers. I give clues to a mystery that doesn't exist. Part 2: The Full Philosophy of "Ma" I: Western critics often frame your work through the lens of "Minimalism"—Judd, Flavin. But you reject that. Why?

Did we miss a key question about Rie Tachikawa’s method? This is the most complete interview available in English. For updates, follow our newsletter—but Tachikawa would prefer you didn’t. (Long silence) Then the wind will sit in the chair

(Smiles) Art is the discipline of lying beautifully. I lie about decay. I lie about emptiness. But the feeling you get when you stand in my room? That feeling is the truth. Part 4: The Full Archive – Why No Digital Copies? I: This is for fans desperately searching for a "Rie Tachikawa interview full" video or PDF—you famously refuse to archive your work digitally. Why?

I call it "controlled neglect." For six months before an exhibition, I stop cleaning my studio. I let dust accumulate. I let spiderwebs grow. Then, I photograph the dust patterns. Then, I vacuum everything clean. The photographs become the blueprint for where I place objects. American Minimalism is about geometry and the object’s

Searching for a transcript is notoriously difficult. The artist rarely gives long-form interviews. She prefers her work to speak for itself. However, during her 2023 residency at the House of World Cultures in Berlin, Tachikawa sat for a rare, uninterrupted 90-minute conversation. Below is the complete, unedited transcript of that interview, providing unprecedented access to her creative process, her philosophy of "Ma" (é–“), and why she considers an empty room the most powerful canvas of all. Part 1: The Origins of Listening Interviewer (I): Rie, thank you for agreeing to a full interview. For those searching for your name, the first thing they see is the term "silent sculptor." Do you accept that title?