OREANDA-NEWS. ITOCHU Corporation (headquartered in Minato-ku, Tokyo; Masahiro Okafuji, President & CEO; hereinafter “ITOCHU”) opened ITOCHU AOYAMA ART SQUARE in the CI Plaza, a commercial facility situated next to ITOCHU’s Tokyo Head Office, in October 2012. The gallery was part of ITOCHU’s social contribution activities, with the aim of developing the future generation through art, contributing to the local community, and promoting both local and international art and culture.

As the second round of photo exhibition curated by photography critic Minoru Shimizu, a photo exhibition by Daisuke Nakashima will be held featuring taken with iPhone. In parallel with the process of photo shooting with a film or a digital camera, Nakashima has continued his creative activities using the iPhone and Internet (SNS). He is confident enough to use the iPhone, considered as the most commonly owned camera in the world, and invokes “the act of taking photos” and “the act of viewing photos” that has been simplified and become routine through digital technology. Ideal for photos taken using the iPhone, liquid-crystalline media such as smartphones and tablets will be used in the exhibition space. In addition, the display will include 3D works about which visitors are allowed to take photos using a mobile device. We invite you to experience the contemporary art presented by the future generation photographer using the most familiar and most popular device in society today.

Minoru Shimizu Born in Tokyo in 1963. Photography critic. Received the first Shigemori Koen Photography Critic Award in 1995, and has contributed to magazines, photobooks and pictorial records of exhibitions on a regular basis, both locally and internationally. His major publications include Shiro to kuro de – Shashin to… (In white and black, with photographs…), Gendaishicho-shinsha, 2004, Shashin to hibi (Photographs and the everyday), Gendaishicho-shinsha, 2006, Hibi kore shashin (Photographs of everyday life), Gendaishicho-shinsha, 2009, and Pururamon - Tansu ni shite fukusu no sonzai (Pluramonity - on the existence of plurality in the mono), Gendaishicho-shinsha, 2011.