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After the “Descent to the Everyday” 67

In the next summer project, Current of Contemporary Art, the

members themselves made a voyage from Kyoto to Osaka. On July 20, 1969,

ten members assembled a Styrofoam raft—in the shape of a gigantic arrow,

3.5 meters wide and 8 meters long—and rode on it, going down the rivers of

Uji, Yodo, and Dojima (Figure 2.7). The whole journey took twelve hours.

Staging the project on a day before the historic landing of Apollo 11 on the

moon, they struck a claim against scientiWc rationalism as well as placid

everyday life, by spending a leisurely time on a rickety vessel. The trip from

Kyoto to Osaka was subsequently repeated twice. In August 1970, eleven

members walked with twelve sheep for eight days and slept seven nights

along the roadside (Sheep); in August 1972, twenty members constructed a

house with a footprint of six tatami mats (4 meters by 3 meters), which became

a vessel in which the Wve members spent six days, drifting downstream

on the rivers Kizu and Yodo (Ie [House]).

Invited to the 1973 Kyoto Biennale, The Play transplanted its

outdoor aspiration in the museum’s exhibition hall. They built a thirtymeter-long

suspension bridge that connected the entrance and the exit of

the assigned gallery. After the exhibition, in a move characteristic of the

group’s whimsical temperament, the members “returned” this bridge—which

was the “essence” of the bridge dissociated from its natural environment—

to landscape, creating a new crossing over the Kizu River, albeit for a single

day. This was the group’s summer project that year.

FIGURE 2.6. The Play, Voyage: A Happening in an Egg, 1968. Document (map and project

summary). Photograph courtesy of Ikemizu Keiichi.

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