Simon Fujiwara: A Whole New World
- art
- exhibition
- museum
The work of British-Japanese artist Simon Fujiwara (1982, London) confronts us with the contemporary world in all its beauty and complexity, its absurdities and contradictions. Like a mirror held up to society, the artist reflects our lives in a frenzied, image-saturated era by creating playful, surreal, and sometimes destabilizing experiences. Fujiwara covers a wide range of subjects: history, mythology, sexuality, psychoanalysis, architecture, art history, anthropology. Despite this broad scope, his work remains deeply informed by his own experiences, offering a personal perspective on wider social issues. His favorite themes—icons, cartoons, amusement parks, mass tourist sites, and museums—reveal his fascination with how society represents, exaggerates, or invents images of itself. He examines the reverse side of these seemingly attractive surfaces to ask a disturbing question: why do we long for authenticity even as we construct ever more artificial realities? This exhibition showcases the breadth of a know-how ranging from painting, cinema, performance, animation, and narration. Through these various tools, Fujiwara sketches multiple portraits of the 21st century.
Bon à savoir
An exhibition covering nearly twenty years of creation, presenting works blending painting, cinema, performance, animation and storytelling.
Lien sourceOrganisateur
Mudam Luxembourg - Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean

































