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Masato Nakamura's Otemachi, Marunouchi, and Yurakucho Sanpo

EVENTS

Masato Nakamura's Otemachi, Marunouchi, and Yurakucho Sanpo

Upcoming
Type

Tours

Sanpo

Venue

Otemachi/Marunouchi/Yurakucho Area

Otemachi First Square

1-5-1 Otemachi, Chiyoda-ku

Date

11/22/2025 Sat.

13:00–14:30 (meeting time 12:45)

Ticket

¥3,000

From a previous Art Walk event, at the Marunouchi Street Gallery.

Experience the city as a gallery on this special art sanpo with Masato Nakamura, artist and General Producer of the biennale!

 

The Otemachi, Marunouchi, and Yurakucho area has been a business hub driving the Japanese economy since the modern era. In recent years, it has also gained a reputation as a fun and exciting place to visit on your days off. Perhaps you’ve heard that its streets are lined with popular shops and restaurants—or that it’s one of Tokyo’s top destinations for art?

 

We’ll start with a live painting on a wall at Otemachi First Square, then stroll down Marunouchi Naka-dori to see remarkable public art and pieces from the Tokyo Biennale. Our sanpo ends at the Gyoko-dori Underground Gallery.

Artists

Artist, Professor at Tokyo University of the Arts (Department of Painting). Born 1963 in Odate City, Akita, Japan. In the early 1990’s, he set up guerilla art projects –THE GINBURART in Ginza and Sinjuku Shonen Art in Shinjuku’s Kabukicho district (1993). In 1997, he formed an alternative artist initiative called “commandN.” Activities of this group include the international video installation “Akihabara TV” held multiple years in 1999, 2000, and 2002. His work was displayed in the 49th Venice Biennale (2001) Japan Pavilion First & Slow exhibition. From 2004, he founded a number of art projects including himming in Himi (Toyama Pref.) and ZERODATE in Odate (Akita Pref.) Nakamura then founded 3331 Arts Chiyoda in June 2010 as an independent and sustainable art center. With an extensive background in a variety of expressive activities, starting in summer 2020 he is taking on the challenge of developing the Tokyo Biennale, an art festival that will dig for the cultural and artistic resources underlying the city of Tokyo.

Map

Tokyo Metro (Marunouchi/Chiyoda/Hanzomon/Tozai) and Toei Mita “Otemachi Sta.” (Ex. C8/11/12)
5 min walk from JR Tokyo Sta. (Marunouchi North Gate)

Related exhibition

  • Painting-drawing
  • Public-production

Naoki Sato: There, It Has Grown.

Naoki Sato worked as a graphic designer before shifting his focus to drawing in 2013. The charcoal drawing he began the following year, titled Late of “There, It Has Grown.” was created by horizontally connecting large plywood panels. After being exhibited in various venues, it now exceeds 300 meters in length. This exhibition will feature both the display of this work and public creation session of his creative process across two adjacent venues. Sato’s life’s work, accumulated over twelve years of time, will proliferate within the cityscape of towering skyscrapers.   Sponsor: Mitsubishi Estate Co., Ltd.     Venue ① Gyoko-dori Underground Gallery “There, It Has Grown. 2018–2025” (Exhibition) Approximately 202 meters (221 wooden panels) drawn after 2018 are displayed in this exhibition of Late of “There, It Has Grown.” (2014-). Additionally, ceramic sculptures created starting in 2025 are arranged in front of the drawings, while another set of ceramics painted in acrylic are directly layered over the charcoal pieces. Sato’s 2013 work, First “There, It Has Grown.” began abruptly while walking around Kanda Nishiki-cho, when he decided, “Well, I’ll try drawing the plants I saw here today.” Regarding this practice, which has continued and evolved over the past 12 years, Sato himself states, “I’d like to leave its interpretation up to the viewer.”   Venue ② Otemachi Park Building, 1F Entrance “There, It Has Grown. 2025–” (Public Creation) The panels beyond the 369th of Late of “There, It Has Grown.” will be created publicly. Just as the way this work began, these drawings will also start with walking around the surrounding area. Sato states, “Before Otemachi became a district of office buildings, samurai residences were spread throughout the area, but before that, it was a wetland thick with reeds and rushes. I want to find traces of that landscape in the area, as if envisioning it.” Moreover, panels 1–147, created prior to the portion currently on view at the Gyoko-dori Underground Gallery (2018–2025), will also be presented at another venue.
Ongoing 09/29/2025 - 12.12 / ① Gyoko-dori Underground Gallery / ② Otemachi Park Bldg. 1st Floor Entrance
  • Painting-drawing

Fu Ouchi: Dispersion, Ascent, Discipline, Integration

Fu Ouchi creates paintings that traverse the realms of figuration and abstraction with his soft use of color. His works evoke both splendor and transience simultaneously. Through his practice, he strives to capture the essence of life, attempting to translate into pictorial expression thoughts that defy words, emotions churning within the body, and phenomena beyond grasping.   “Ascent and descent, prosperity and decline, straight lines drawn on a map, the square canvas, the system of the human body, widespread concepts and terms, feelings of self-denial and relief, and the gentle, curving growth expressed by nature. These are likely small “forces” born within a greater “force.” Yet such words feel like a form of entertainment, never reaching the core.” (Fu Ouchi)   For the festival, Ouchi will create a large-scale work measuring 10×10 meters, using the south wall of Otemachi First Square as his canvas. By creating the work through on-site residency, he will engage with the space, weaving a world that emerges like the unspoken words born in the city, resonating within each viewer.   Sponsor: Mitsubishi Estate Co., Ltd. Cooperation: Otemachi First Square Co., Ltd.
Ongoing 10/17/2025 - 12.14 / Otemachi First Square

One of the artist’s works in the Photo Project “Tokyo Perspective.”
← →

Masato Nakamura

Artist, Professor at Tokyo University of the Arts (Department of Painting). Born 1963 in Odate City, Akita, Japan. In the early 1990’s, he set up guerilla art projects –THE GINBURART in Ginza and Sinjuku Shonen Art in Shinjuku’s Kabukicho district (1993). In 1997, he formed an alternative artist initiative called “commandN.” Activities of this group include the international video installation “Akihabara TV” held multiple years in 1999, 2000, and 2002. His work was displayed in the 49th Venice Biennale (2001) Japan Pavilion First & Slow exhibition.

From 2004, he founded a number of art projects including himming in Himi (Toyama Pref.) and ZERODATE in Odate (Akita Pref.) Nakamura then founded 3331 Arts Chiyoda in June 2010 as an independent and sustainable art center. With an extensive background in a variety of expressive activities, starting in summer 2020 he is taking on the challenge of developing the Tokyo Biennale, an art festival that will dig for the cultural and artistic resources underlying the city of Tokyo.

Nihonbashi/Bakurocho Area

Etoile Kaito Living Bldg.

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