



Rinko Kawauchi likes to capture the little details of everyday life that often go unnoticed. Her eye endows ordinary objects and situations with a unique quality that infuses them with beauty, poetry, and emotion. Whether in her books or her exhibitions, Rinko Kawauchi groups her works together in ways that reveal unexpected combinations of forms, moods or atmospheres, and elaborates subtle narratives that invite us to meditate on the infinite wonders of the world and the finite nature of all beings.
-Fondation pour l'art Contemporain


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Culture (from the latin cultura stemming from colere, meaning "to cultivate,") generally refers to patterns of human activity and the symbolic structures and systems that give activities meaning. Often even the creators contest the meanings of such systems, which tend to lack fixed boundaries and are constantly in flux.
So, people constantly create and recreate themselves and this seems to be reflected in individuals and groups alike.
Culture is manifested in such things as language, style of dress, eating practices, celebrations, arts, science, as well as political and religious systems.
Essentially, what I came away with upon leaving college was the overwhelming sense of the human condition. A life on earth as a human persists to be just as heavy as it ever has been in the past, regardless of any agricultural, technological, or scientific advances. Though life is lived and perceived differently from whatever perspective one is given at birth, ie: time period, location, economic status etc., each person is born with the same guts and emotions as anyone else. We all need to come to terms with our individuality and sort out the feelings surrounding the loneliness of mortality. We also need the comfort and safety of identifying with and interacting with others.
What makes the human condition so utterly overwhelming and amazing is the expanse of possible permutations of the experience of a lifetime on earth.
Cultural anthropologists tend to use the term culture most often to refer to the universal human method of classifying and communicating experiences symbolically - which is also what art is all about.
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Here are some artists who explore concepts of identity in their work.













