remember everything
*Information at the time of adoption.
- Name of the organization or individual
- Fumiharu Sato
- subsidy category
- Creation Grant
- Grant Type
- single year individual
Reiwa 2 (2020) 1st Term Creation Grant [Single-Year Grant Program]



Business Overview
In the “Memorize All ” project, he collected as much as possible of the monuments and plants in Hibiya Park, as well as words such as signs in the park, such as explanations of the park's history and guides to its use, and presented his works using them in a corner of the library. Focusing on the (un) possibility of remembering everything, based on a book in which events extracted from the signboard are arranged in chronological order, a video work accompanied by a performance was presented; a bundle of sheets of paper in which all the words were transcribed (visitors can take them home freely); a long video work in which the transcription was randomly played back; and a drawing in which two people drew a map of the park while recalling it. A book edited linearly along a time line and a random bundle of paper. At the same time, handouts were also made and distributed. This project was carried out as a participation project of the international art festival "Tokyo Biennale 2020/2021."
- Period of Activity / Project
- Friday, September 3, 2021 - Monday, September 6, 2021
- Venues
- Chiyoda-ku Hibiya Library and Culture Museum
*Information such as project outlines is provided by organizations and individuals providing subsidies.
Profile
[Fumiharu Sato]
Born in 1989 in Nara Prefecture. Graduated from the Graduate School of Human Science, University of Tsukuba in 2014. In 2011, he formed Shiji SATO and Hiroko HARAGUCHI. Starting from the unit of two people, which is the smallest web of human relationships, he collaborates on works and projects mainly using images, with an interest in the "between" that connects and separates them. Recent exhibitions include the solo exhibition "Two Two" (2020: Kanazawa Art Gummi, Ishikawa) and "Tokyo Biennale 2020/2021" (2021: Hibiya Library and Culture Museum, Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo).




