Michiko Itatani at Virginia Tech

Cosmic Encounters

June 6th - August 30th, 2024

Moss Arts Center at Virginia Tech
190 Alumni Mall
Blacksburg, VA 24061

Michiko Itatani's Cosmic Encounters consists of seven large-scale oil paintings, completed from 2016 to 2023, depicting imagined interiors of stately concert halls, observatories, libraries, and cathedrals punctuated with otherworldly light and celestial phenomena. Born in Osaka, Japan, Itatani's embrace of exploration and chance was evident in how she found her place in America — she chose Chicago by placing her finger on a map and has lived and worked there since 1973.

Itatani's imagined architectural spaces, seemingly devoid of human presence, are shrouded in mystery. They display an array of human curiosity, as if these spaces were refuges of civilization. Under the veil of night, the interior floors come alive with a collection of globes, constellation maps, scientific and musical instruments, and other curiosities. These items symbolize humankind’s quest for knowledge and enlightenment, placed under starry skies and peering through the glass ceilings of the exaggerated linear perspectives in Itatani's compositions. These achievements can seem like a ripple in the ocean compared to the scale of the universe, adding to the intrigue of her work.  

The animated characters in these worlds are patterned luminescent orbs; they organize themselves into cascading rings and floating chandeliers or appear as theatre lights, for instance, in the "Cosmic Wanderlust" painting from Encounter 16-B-3, 2016. The radiating orbs can be otherworldly or natural phenomena. In several paintings, a trio of chandeliers with rings of glowing orbs resemble alien craft. In other paintings such as "Shadows of the Mind" painting from Celestial Connection 18-B-5, the hovering yellow orbs mimic fireflies, infiltrating a Gehry-like glasshouse from the forest outside. The lights appear as the only living entities, independent from the fixed interiors. Set against the nighttime scenes, they imply cosmic encounters, the alien visitations we hear about in science fiction stories searching humanity's caverns of knowledge and seeking contact. Each painting's upward view makes the viewer look to the heavens, reinforcing the feeling that these lights are otherworldly.  

Images and text courtesy of Moss Arts Center, Virginia Tech. Photo: Brian Holcombe 

  • Opening Reception
    5-7pm
    Thursday, June 6th

    Moss Arts Center Grand Lobby
    190 Alumni Mall
    Blacksburg, VA 24061

    Curatorial Walkthrough
    12pm
    Thursday, June 13th, July 11th, and August 8th

    Moss Arts Center Grand Lobby
    190 Alumni Mall
    Blacksburg, VA 24061

    Closing Reception
    5-7pm
    Thursday, August 29th

    Moss Arts Center Grand Lobby
    190 Alumni Mall
    Blacksburg, VA 24061

  • Michiko Itatani (b. 1948, Japan) is a graduate of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she is professor emeritus of painting. Itatani has received numerous prestigious awards, including the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, two Illinois Arts Council Artist’s Fellowships, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. Her work is held in the public collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago; Art Institute of Chicago; Daum Museum of Contemporary Art in Sedalia, Missouri; Wright Museum in Beloit, Wisconsin; Erie Art Museum in Erie, Pennsylvania; Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland; American Embassy Permanent Collection in Brasilia, Brazil; Villa-Haiss-Museum in Zell am Harmersback, Germany; Tokoha Museum in Shizuoka, Japan; National Museum of Contemporary Art in Korea; the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec (MNBAQ) in Québec, Canada; Museu D’art Contemporani (MACBA) in Barcelona, Spain; and others.

  • Located at the crossroads of Virginia Tech and downtown Blacksburg, Virginia, on the corner of Main Street and Alumni Mall, the Moss Arts Center is a thriving community where the arts are a catalyst for engagement, inspiration, and discovery.

    The center operates as both a presenting organization and as a 147,000-square-foot, top-caliber arts center. Since opening in 2013, the center has brought innovative, significant, and diverse programming to the campus and the region.

    The Moss Arts Center is named in tribute to artist and philanthropist Patricia Buckley Moss, who committed $10 million toward construction of the facility on the campus of Virginia Tech.  

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Michiko Itatani at City University of New York