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Thursdays at Villa Kujoyama: the program for July, 2nd 2026

Thursdays at Villa Kujoyama
02 jul. 2026Villa Kujoyama

Dates

02 jul. 2026

14h00 - 21h00

Venue and informations

Villa Kujoyama
17-22 Hinookaebisudanichō, Yamashina Ward, Kyoto, 607-8492


Free entrance


Program

Program is subject to change. This page will be updated accordingly.

Please note that there is no parking space for cars in front of Villa Kujoyama (bicycle parking space only).

2:00 PM–6:00 PM – Studios
Open studios by Aurélie Lanoiselée, Daphné Biiga Nwanak & Baudouin Woehl, François-Xavier Richard, Gérald Vatrin, Raphaël Zarka and Hippolyte Hentgen

 

All day – 3rd Floor Hall
Presentation of the latest editions by OK Des by Sébastien Desplat

 

All day – Reception desk
“With One’s Eyes Closed”: Villa Kujoyama audioguide by Daphné Biiga Nwanak & Baudouin Woehl

 

2:30 PM–4:00 PM – Auditorium
“The Cube and the Wheel – Raphaël Zarka and Masakazu Horiuti”: conference by Raphaël Zarka with Aki Kikukawa, curator at the Art Museum of Kyoto City University of Arts, and Maiko Nakayama, curator at the Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art (FR-JP)

 

5:30 PM–6:30 PM – Auditorium
“Body Movie”: reading and performance by Daphné Biiga Nwanak & Baudouin Woehl and Azusa Takeuchi

 

7:00 PM–7:45 PM – Terrace
“Tokonoma Syndrome (半夏生)”: installation and activation by Fanny Terno (registration on the day at the reception desk)

 

8:00 PM–9:00 PM – Salon
DJ set by Krikor Kouchian with Froid Dub
Cocktail reception

 

TORO café will be selling snacks from 3 pm to 7 pm !


The residents' projects

 

Parallel Perspectives: Masakazu Horiuti and the uses of geometry in Japanese art

Raphaël Zarka intends to use his residency to familiarise himself with the work of Japanese modernist artist Masakazu Horiuti and conduct research into the use of geometry in Japanese art, prior to a joint exhibition with Horiuti which the KYOCERA Museum of Art in Kyoto is planning for 2027. Through Horiuti, Zarka wishes to examine Japanese uses of parallel perspective (axonometry), in which there is no vanishing point, unlike western representations of geometric spaces used since the Renaissance, that have been governed by the rules of a central perspective. The use of parallel perspective raises compositional challenges which Japanese artists have experimented with for hundreds of years.

 

 

GOZE/GAZE (瞽女/ゲイズ) : performance and self-expression by disabled itinerant musicians

Daphné Biiga Nwanak and Baudouin Woehl set out in search of the Goze – visually impaired women who worked as itinerant musicians, and whose story is embedded in the history of rural Japan. Part music, part theatre, their project considers how, over centuries, the Goze surpassed representations of disability by developing their own form of self-expression. During their residency, Daphné Biiga Nwanak and Baudouin Woehl will consult archives and meet artists with disabilities, education specialists and in order to understand the sensory context in which the Goze perform.

 

Aurélie Lanoiselée (2026, crafts)

 

Knotted to Be Unknotted: the Bonds that Unite us

The project originated when Aurélie Lanoiselée met Yoshika Yajima, a doctoral candidate in Osaka whose thesis is on the tradition of hanamusubi (flower knots) during the Edo period from a gender perspective. Hanamusubi, shufuku and shutara function as a codex, passed on only by hand. Aurélie Lanoiselée’s project questions the practice of a knot that is made to be untied and retied. Underlying themes will be how to make the invisible visible, ties within the social fabric, the encounter of cord and hand, a thought and a form-creating gesture, all explored through exclusively Japanese materials.

 

François-Xavier Richard (2017, crafts)

The Paper Organ

A painter, sculptor, and printmaker, François-Xavier Richard is the founder of Atelier d’Offard, which specializes in creating hand-block-printed wallpaper. He follows the artisanal techniques of the great manufactories of the 18th and 19th centuries, while bringing a personal perspective to these traditional methods. During his residency at Villa Kujoyama in 2017, he created the Paper Organ, an instrument that resonates with sounds produced by different types of paper, notably washi. This work is activated through performances in collaboration with musicians, offering audiences a unique sonic experience.

Gérald Vatrin (2023, crafts)

Following his residency at Villa Kujoyama in 2023, Gérald Vatrin has returned to Japan as part of the Institut français’ MIRA program, to pursue a transcultural project that brings together contemporary glassmaking and the ancestral art of Japanese bamboo craftsmanship. Fascinated by the precision and depth of this traditional expertise, he is collaborating with master bamboo artisan Hideaki Hosokawa and a glass workshop in Kameoka to explore new connections between the two disciplines. Through glass prototypes and drawings, Vatrin initiates a creative dialogue with bamboo, giving rise to hybrid and unprecedented works. More than a collaborative process, this encounter serves as a bridge between cultures, fostering a rich exchange of artistic practices and perspectives.

Krikor Kouchian (2021, music)

Five years after his first residency at Villa Kujoyama, Krikor Kouchian returns to Japan as part of the Krikor Kouchian x Froid Dub — Asia 2026 tour, organized in collaboration with the Paris-based label Delodio, continuing the artistic dialogue initiated during his stay in Kyoto in 2021. Bringing together French and Japanese artists through electronic music, sonic experimentation, and live performance, the tour extends Kouchian’s ongoing research at the intersection of technology, improvisation, and sound perception, while fostering exchanges between artistic practices and cultural contexts.

Hippolyte Hentgen (2018, visual arts)

The duo Hippolyte Hentgen continues the lines of research initiated during their residency at Villa Kujoyama in 2018. The study of basketry complements the body of objects already present in their work.

Sébastien Desplat (2021,crafts)

Sébastien Desplat will present Pépites, the latest publication by painter Idir Davaine. Printed entirely in risograph, the book is the result of two years of close collaboration with the artist.

 


Guest artist: Fanny Terno

Tokonoma Syndrome is an evolving installation of objects, images, and gestures informed by the aesthetics and practices of sadō (the Way of Tea). Renewed with the changing seasons, it unfolds through shifting arrangements in which images are not simply presented but allowed to emerge. Each activation explores the relationships between things and the echoes they generate, approaching image-making as a form of tateru (点てる), echoing with the attentive preparation of tea. Created for Villa Kujoyama, this activation takes place during the micro-season of Hangeshō (半夏生).


Credits

Visuel: Vue de la Villa #32 : 太陽と鉄 [Le Soleil et l’Acier]
© Grégoire Schaller (2025, danse), photographie de Marine Giraudo