Multus #3
"The Melody That Will Change Your Life" Kant Ostinato 4 Piano Version Japan Premiere
Related Plans/Tomoko Mukaiyama Talk & Concert "See Tokyo, Photography and Fashion"
*Information at the time of adoption.
- Name of the organization or individual
- General Incorporated Association Monten
- subsidy category
- Creation Grant
- Grant Type
- single year
FY26 Term I Creation Grant [Single-Year Grant Program]

Business Overview
The third film in the "Multus" series supervised by artist and musician Mukaiyama Tomoko. <<Canto Ostinato for 4pianos>> (1976 - 1979) composed by Simion ten Holt, a Dutch composer representing European minimalists (Japanese premiere of the 4 piano version with a performance time of about 2 hours). The four pianists are Tomoko Mukaiyama, contemporary music specialist Gerard Bauhaus, young Japanese pianists Hiroaki Takaba and Yusuke Sato. At the same time, Tomoko Mukaiyama will stage an installation space with lighting equipment brought by the audience. In "See Tokyo, Photography and Fashion," Tomoko Mukaiyama, who is good at crossing genres, will hold a talk and concert program under the theme of "Music, photography, fashion". Photographer Masashi Sanai and stylist Daisuke Iga will be invited to the exhibition at Ryogoku Monten Hall.
- Period of Activity / Project
- Saturday, March 7, 2015 to 8th (Sun) Sunday, March 15, 2015
- Venues
- Asahi Art Square (Sumida Ward, Tokyo) Ryogoku Monten Hall (Sumida Ward, Tokyo)
*Information such as project outlines is provided by organizations and individuals providing subsidies.
Profile
【 Tomoko Mukaiyama 】
After winning the International Gaudeamus Competition in 1991, she was invited as a soloist by the world's top orchestras, including the Royal Concertgebouw, to perform the premieres of new pieces. In recent years, in addition to collaborations with Ili Killian and Marina Abramovic, he has also advanced into the field of art, including performing arts and installations that are not bound by conventional forms. In 2013, he presented new works at the Aichi Triennale and the Setouchi International Art Festival, which were well received.




