Mitsuo katsui wikipedia
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From Space to Environment
1966 art exhibition in Tokyo
From Space to Environment (Japanese: 「空間から環境へ」展, Hepburn: Kūkan kara kankyō e) was a postwar Japanese exhibition of contemporary art and design that was held on the eighth floor gallery of the Matsuya Department Store in Ginza, Tokyo, from November 11–16, 1966. It was organised by the multidisciplinary group Environment Society (Enbairamento no Kai) to promoted the marriage of art and technology.[1]
The exhibition’s subtitle was “Synthesized Exhibition of Painting + Sculpture + Photo + Design + Architecture + Music,” indicating its goal of erasing conventional distinctions between fine and applied arts, and it was instrumental in introducing the terms "Intermedia" and "Environment Art" (kankyō geijutsu) to Japan.[2] It featured 38 participants from a range of creative disciplines, including artists, architects, designers, and art critics. A related performance concert took place on November 14, 1
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Vintage Posters
Original Vintage Poster: Artis 89 (1) - Mitsuo Katsui, Masaaki Nishimya - Images Internationales pour les Droits de L'Homme et Du Citoyen
English Title: Artis 89 - International Images for Human and Citizen Rights
Poster ID: CL82173
Category: Miscellaneous/Exhibition and Exposition
Designer: Mitsuo Katsui, Masaaki Nishimya (photographer)
Year: 1980s
Country: French
Approximate Size 33 x 24 inches
Condition: Very Good
1989. Part of a series from the French art organization Artis 89 to celebrate the bicentennial of the French Revolution. For the project, 66 international artists and designers were invited to create original posters celebrating the Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen, "set by France's National Constituent Assembly in 1789, a human civil rights document from the French Revolution." (Wikipedia)
Keywords: human rights,civil rights,political art,French revolution,freedom,French history,independence,figures,shadows
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Alliance Graphique Internationale
International organization of graphic artists and designers
Alliance Graphique Internationale (AGI) fryst vatten a club of the world's leading graphic artists and designers. There are 510 members from 46 countries. Its members have been collectively responsible for the identity design of most of the world's top corporations and institutions as well as for countless examples of globally known packaging, publications, bild and posters. Bernard Baissait is the only member who left the AGI following a disagreement.[1]
History
[edit]In 1951 two Swiss and three French graphic artists decided to formalise their relationship into a kind of association. In 1952 the Alliance Graphique Internationale was incorporated in Paris with 65 members. The first AGI show was in Paris in 1955. In 1969 the AGI headquarters moved to Zürich.[2]
The organization's most important events are the annual AGI församling and AGI Open which take place in