Rie Tachikawa Interview Full Free
Beyond the Frame: Reflections on the Full Rie Tachikawa Interview
In the world of contemporary Japanese art, few names evoke the same sense of ethereal mystery and structural audacity as Rie Tachikawa (1965–2011). While her large-scale installations—often involving thread, netting, and abandoned architectural spaces—are well documented in exhibition catalogs, the voice of the artist herself has remained frustratingly quiet. Until now.
Rie Tachikawa Interview Full – A Deep Dive into the Voice Actress’s Journey, Craft, and Future Plans rie tachikawa interview full
In a 2023 feature-length interview with the indie journal Eiga No Tabi (The Film Journey), the moderator asked her about her infamous 2019 hiatus. In the 3-minute TV cut, she said: “I needed rest.” But in the full interview, the unedited version, she unpacked that for twelve minutes: Beyond the Frame: Reflections on the Full Rie
RT: Exactly. Because real dust is random. Recreated dust is a memory of time passing. In my 2024 piece Hazy Protocol, I used a feather duster to trace the path of an imaginary housekeeper from 1932. The dust lines on the floor were not swept away—they were drawn back in. The audience walks on the dust. They become the housekeeper. They complete the loop. Rie Tachikawa Interview Full – A Deep Dive
RT: (She picks up a glass of water from the table). This glass is half full. An optimist says it is half full. A pessimist says it is half empty. I say: Look at the space above the water, where the air lives. That space is filled with potential. In a gallery, people rush to the object. I want them to rush to the shadow behind the object. I learned this from kintsugi—the art of repairing broken pottery with gold. Everyone stares at the gold vein. But the gold is just the map. The true story is the break itself. The moment of dropping. The gasp. That is where the life is.
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