Yukinori Yanagi (Fukuoka, 1959; lives and works in Momoshima, Japan) is one of Japan’s most influential contemporary artists, known for exploring complex issues of sovereignty, globalization, and borders through large-scale, site-specific installations. His work also delves into Japanese history and nationalism, evoking intricate systems of symbolic imagery that shape our understanding of space and identity.
Creating provocative multimedia artworks that dissolve the stasis of symbolic signs into organic forms, Yanagi’s practice often exposes preconceived patterns of political and national oppression. More recently, he has also focused on developing large-scale public art projects aimed at revitalizing abandoned spaces. One of the most ambitious of these projects is the Inujima Seirensho Art Museum—a former local copper refinery in Inujima, Okayama, preserved and transformed into a museum—which features several of his permanent site-specific installations that address the effects of modernization.
The exhibition at Pirelli HangarBicocca will be the first major survey of the artist’s practice in Europe, and will include a wide selection of both iconic works from the 1980s and 1990s, such as The world flag ant farm project, that gained international recognition on the occasion of the 45th Venice Biennale in 1993, for which he won the ‘Aperto 93’ award, as well as more recent works. Yukinori Yanagi will recontextualize some of his most important monumental installations, which have been exhibited worldwide throughout his career, responding specifically to the post-industrial space of Pirelli HangarBicocca. The exhibition will offer immersive paths to explore the trajectories and worlds created by the artist’s oeuvre.