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String Constructions

Kazuko Miyamoto, Male I, 1974, Installationsansicht im 597 Broadway studio. Foto: Unbekannt. Courtesy Arbeit: Kazuko Miyamoto und Zürcher Gallery, New York / Paris.

Artists

Kazuko Miyamoto


Press release


The exhibition is the first institutional solo presentation devoted to the Japanese-American artist Kazuko Miyamoto (b. 1942, JP) in Germany, a leading figure in the post-minimal and feminist movements in New York, where she has lived since 1964. Spread across the first, second, and third floors of KW, as well as its courtyard, _String Constructions_ focuses on Miyamoto’s eponymous sculpture series from the 1970s and 1980s, and traces the shifts in her methodology. The seminal _String Constructions_, two- and three-dimensional waves of string are borrowed works, but their intricate construction of repeatable but unique gestures—marking, nailing, knotting, and rigorously tethering hundreds of strings—is produced onsite by the KW team and will be cut when the exhibition ends. Her sculptural constructions, therefore, interweave the notion of collectivity, liveness, sustainability, as well as the ephemeral or temporary into their conceptual framework. This line of inquiry follows KW’s Director, Emma Enderby’s vision for focusing on collectiveness, sustainability, and local production, while similarly continuing KW’s institutional legacy, revisiting artists that sit outside of the canon. Miyamoto’s sculptures, made of string, nails, and drawn lines, along with her spatial installations within the institution’s factory building, tap into her interest in the body’s relationship to urban, socio-economic, and functional architectures. These works cut through the space with an immersive yet transient quality. The show presents her unique performative sensibilities towards the body’s relationship to space, material, and the politics of labor and display. During the 1970s and 1980s, Kazuko Miyamoto developed many of her works as part of co-organizing A.I.R. Gallery in New York’s SoHo district—the first non-profit space led by and dedicated to exclusively female artists in New York. In her own gallery space on the Lower East Side, onetwentyeight, she likewise has continued to promote feminist and collective practices today. The exhibition’s public program will highlight the role of collaboration, performance, and feminism in Miyamoto’s work and the city of Berlin. As part of a seminar in cooperation with the Berlin University of the Arts – UdK Berlin, a group of students will collectively and site-specifically reconstruct a work by the artist—wood and rope bridges, originally installed at Bryant Park in 1982 —which will be on view in KW’s courtyard for the duration of the exhibition. A publication featuring new conversations and statements by and with friends, family, fellow artists, and collaborators will be published in collaboration with Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther und Franz König.


Through

18 January 2026

Hours

Wed-Mon: 11:00-19:00, Thu: 11:00-21:00