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Kenji Yanobe - Torayan's Great Adventure (special cover)

Torayan's Great Adventure (special cover)

by Kenji Yanobe

size: H9.6 x W9 in (H24.0 x W22.5 cm.)
Year: 2007
Edition: NA
picture book with 64pages, superior binding (special Torayan cover version)
No Signiture
Delivery Time : 1 weeks

Provided in the partnership with:
YAMAMOTO GENDAI
  • Price of the work
  • US$50
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Kenji Yanobe "Torayan's Great Adventure" is the picture book inspired by Yanobe Kenji's visit to the Chernobyl disaster site in 1997, when he carried out the famous "Atom Suit" project.
This book is a special cover version. The cover is made of the same material of the "Atom Suit" which Yanobe was wearing at his visit to Chernobyl. If you want to know more about the "Atom Suit" project, read this.
The image of the sun which is on its cover came from the sun he found on the wall of one classroom in Chernobyl.

Kenji Yanobe
image of the book opened. Story is written in Japanese and an English translation booklet comes with it
Yanobe Kenji Torayan's great adventure
Between the story pages, photograph of the installation by Kenji Yanobe are included.


yanobe_atom_suit.JPG Afterword by Kenji Yanobe from the "Torayan's Great Adventure"
In June 1997, dressed in my radiation protection outfit "Atom Suit," I visited Chernobyl, the site of worst nuclear accident in human history.
From my experience in early childhood at the former site of Expo '70 (the Osaka World's Fair of 1970), I formed a concept of a "Pilgrimage to the Ruins of the Future" and referred to social issues through my art, I realized soon enough that I was just stuck in a kind of morass of cheap justice and superficial ambition.
The moment I stepped into the Chernobyl zone, all my romantic illusions were shattered. I was still unfazed while I walked around the destoryed city and saw the rusted-out Ferris wheel and the movie theater. It was when I met people who were living in the forest, in the area where it is forbidden to live due to the high radiation levels, that I started to feel disturbed. The elderly, who had returned to the villages where they had always lived, and the three-year-old boy, who had no choice but to live there with his mother. In contrast to the warm smiles of the friendly residents of the forest, who welcomed me in my protective suit, the expression on my face behind the helmet's glass was contorted with confusion.
It is now ten years later. The act of making works and continuing to show them is a kind of floundering in search of responses of the people I met then. It is also a journey of fighting to rehabilitate the self of my youth, which was on the verge of forgetting the human soul in the name of creative expression. This journey remains unfinished, and I expect to proceed with it for some time yet, along with that doll I picked up then and that sun I found drawn on the wall there.
Kenji Yanobe, June 2007


Story from the "Torayan's Great Adventure"
"One evening in the forest, the hero Torayan went out on a journey holding a tiny sun. Eventually he found a number of friends, and the tiny sun began to grow..."

"Torayan's Great Adventure" PV
(Sorry, Japanese Only. But you can see the story by images!)

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Related Topics

Interview with Yuko Yamamoto, galleriest of Yamamoto Gendai
Sep. 04, 2012
[Interview]
We have interviewed Yamamoto about the artists, Fukaya and Yanobe before. But this time, we asked her about how she started her gallery and what she cares for choosing artists to represent.
Kenji Yanobe "Until Sun Child Rises" at the Gallery of Ibaraki
Jun. 18, 2012
[Exhibition]
On 11th March 2012, 6.2 meter (20.4 feet) tall FTP statue was unveiled in the central island of the rotary in front of Hankyu Minami Ibaraki station (Ibaraki city, Osaka). The day marked exact one year since the Great Eastern Japan Earthquake
"Double Vision" at Moscow museum of modern art
Apr. 14, 2012
[Exhibition]
The Moscow Museum of Modern Art intends to give an overview of contemporary Japanese Artwork with a capacious exhibition dedicated solely to Japanese Art from the last 40 years...
"Kenji Yanobe : Sun Child, Taro's Children" at Taro Okamoto Memorial Museum
Jan. 14, 2012
[Exhibition]
2011 is the 100th anniversary of Taro Okamoto's birth, who gave Yanobe great influence on his life as an artist. In celebration of Okamoto's centenary, several exhibitions have been held this year. The last one is this "Kenji Yanobe: Sun Child, Child of Taro". Colliding with Okamoto's work, Yanobe presents a novel and exciting view before our eyes.
Kenji Yanobe "Levitation" at Yamamoto Gendai Gallery
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[Exhibition]
Kenji Yanobe's solo exhibition "Levitation", was held at Yamamoto Gendai Gallery. The selected pieces were from his entirely new series to operate on magnetic energy.
Gallerist talks about Kenji Yanobe
Oct. 23, 2010
[Interview]
We interviewed Yuko Yamamoto, the gallery owner of Yamamoto Gendai, about the a...
Kenji Yanobe "Mythos" exhibited in an old electric power plant
Jul. 23, 2010
[Exhibition]
[through Sep 23] This exhibition place used to be an electric power plant. Yanobe will transform this abandoned building into the "future" place by creating a story and put it as an installation...
What made Yanobe create "Torayan"
Mar. 25, 2009
[Announcement]
The 1970 Osaka Expo, with its motto "Human Progress and Harmony" was the beacon...
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