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Written by Ken Sato
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Tuesday, 02 April 2013 14:40 |
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Ken Sato, the director of Big Picture, collaborated with a eccentric Japanese artiest, Miyuki Nishizawa, as known as Newspaper Woman, at Guggenheim Museum in NY city in March 8th 2013. "Big Newspaper Project" was a part of Miyuki's art performance at Guggenheim in March 8th. Ken designed the giant newspaper and it was used during her performance.
Currently the Guggenheim is holding the exhibition, Gutai: Splendid Playground, which presents the creative spectrum of Japan’s most influential avant-garde collective of the postwar era.
The performance was hommage to Shozo Shimamoto, co-founder of Gutai and recently pass away at the age to 85. Miyuki and Ken are students of Shimamoto.
Please see the detail of the event at Guggenheim website. Art After Dark at the Guggenheim
Please enjoy more pictures at facebook pages.
Here:
and Here:

 
From Guggenheim museum website.

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Written by Fumiko Koizumi
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Monday, 02 August 2010 17:06 |
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Big Picture Rochester 2010 Summer!



You can see more pictures on Big Picture Rochester FaceBook
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Read more...
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Written by osada shinnosuke
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Wednesday, 14 July 2010 16:00 |
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Big Picture Rochester 2010
McCrory Building Panorama Project 2010
Directors: Art for Kenichiro Sato Business for Gerard D. Dimarco
Photographer: Sheridan Vincent Digital Frame, Bricks and Stones were made by: Kenichiro Sato
Suported by City of Rochester
Special Thanks to: Shin Sato, Fumiko Koizumi
This web photo gallery pictures were taken by Sheridan Vincent, Fumiko Koizumi, and Kenichiro Sato
Installation day: May 15, 2010 Building Address: 196 East Main St. Rochester NY
 

More Picture>>
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Written by Ken Sato
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Friday, 04 September 2009 11:54 |
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Celebrating Rochester’s 175th Anniversary
DOWNTOWN: THE WAY IT WAS
Open 24H, Sep 1st 2009 - Summer 2010,
Main St. between Plymouth Av. to Chestnut St.
Addmission Free
In celebration of Rochester’s one-hundred and seventy-fifth anniversary a series of historic photographs have been placed in the windows of many of Main Street’s buildings that today stand where the original enterprises once served their patrons.

The images were greatly enlarged, reproduced and posted by Ken Sato. These early photographs were found in Rochester’s Downtown, a book written by Donovan Shilling that effectively records those bygone days. For decades Rochesterians found Main Street a magnet for shopping, dining and trading. This was especially true of the two-mile long expanse of shops and stores that reached from the intersection of West Main and Broad Streets to the intersection of East Main Street and Goodman Street.
By taking a walk by those “windows into the past” and examining the exceptional images one may well recapture a sense of that vibrant spirit of enterprise that made Rochester great. By also reading the captions below the large photographs one can learn much about the location, architecture, and nature of the many noteworthy buildings that once graced our downtown making it a most attractive place for business, entertainment and shopping.
The photo image project is a joint venture with the City of Rochester and a number of local sponsors in whose building windows the photos were displayed. Leading the project was Attorney Gerard D. DiMarco in collaboration with Ken Sato and Donovan A. Shilling.
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