The Japan Society

Upcoming Events

Creating Possibilities for Encounter: The Kansai Art Scene

Monday 21 July 2025 / 6:45pm
Creating Possibilities for Encounter:  The Kansai Art Scene

Date
Monday 21 July 2025

Time
6.45pm

Venue
The Swedenborg Society

20-21 Bloomsbury Way (Hall entrance on Barter St)
London WC1A 2TH
[Map]

Booking Details
Free- Booking essential

Book online here

Please help us to keep this event free and open to all!

The activities of The Japan Society are made possible thanks to the support of its members. If you are planning to attend this event and are not a member (as an individual or through your employer), please consider becoming a member or making a donation if you can - the recommended donation is £5. Thank you!

   

The creative process is inherently open-ended; its outcomes cannot fully be anticipated at the outset. Rather than viewing creativity as a singular moment of inspiration or innovation, this paper approaches it as an ongoing and broader process that includes preparation, interaction, and responsiveness to others and to the environment.

Drawing on ethnographic research with a network of contemporary art practitioners in the Kansai region of Japan, in this lecture anthropologist Iza Kavedžija explores how artists describe their creative work as shaped by encounters—with people, materials, objects, artworks, and elements of popular culture.

These encounters are not passive events but require a cultivated practice of attunement. Artists spoke of routines and habits that allowed them to be affected by what they encounter, suggesting that creativity involves a kind of openness that must be actively maintained. Creative work, in this sense, is a form of temporal agency that engages with the indeterminacy of everyday life.

Attending to the unexpected becomes not only a possibility but a necessary part of the process. Creative practice can thus be understood as a form of attunement that supports wellbeing by transforming uncertainty into a resource. Through collaboration and improvisation, artists develop ways of working that embrace unpredictability, suggesting that resilience may lie in the capacity to remain open to what cannot fully be known.

Iza Kavedžija is an Associate Professor of Medical Anthropology at the University of Cambridge. She has written on topics including meaning in later life, wellbeing and creativity. Her book publications include Meaning in Life: Tales from Aging Japan (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2019); Values of Happiness: Toward an Anthropology of Purpose in Life (University of Chicago Press, 2016); and The Process of Wellbeing: Conviviality, Care, Creativity (Cambridge University Press, 2021).

If you have any questions, please call The Japan Society office on 020 3075 1996 or email events@japansociety.org.uk.

Image: Kaori Yoshikawa, Selection of works, 2012 ~ present. Catalogue of the exhibition ‘Worlds Within’, part of the AHRC project The Work of Art in Contemporary Japan: Inner and outer worlds of creativity

Supported by the Toshiba International Foundation (TIFO)

Toshiba International Foundation Logo


Booking Info

  • Providing Details in the Booking Form
    Please enter the full name and email address for each attendee in the booking form. If you're booking as a member, please provide the email address associated with your membership so we can match your information in our system. 


  • Booking Confirmation
    You should receive an automated email from The Japan Society confirming your booking
    If you don't receive any confirmation emails, please check your spam folder or email events@japansociety.org.uk.

  • Help us to keep this event free and open to all!
    If you are not a member of The Japan Society (as an individual or through your employer), please consider becoming a member or making a donation if you can - the recommended donation is £5.