Nas art forum dr kristen sharp

NAS Art Forum | Dr Kristen Sharp

Free
Wednesday 3 September 2025
12:45 PM - 1:30 PM
National Art School
156 Forbes Street Darlinghurst, NSW 2010 Australia
Micro-acts in public spaces: Yuko Mohri’s Moré Moré (Leaky) series

Contemporary Japanese artist Yuko Mohri (b. 1980) photographed the idiosyncratic, temporary remediation works made by Tokyo station managers in a series titled Moré Moré (Leaky) –fieldwork’ (2009−2021). These creations, situated on the Yamanote metro line, use everyday objects to repair subway groundwater leakage. They demonstrate a micro level of care to draw attention to the ecologies of water, including histories of water management and geotopographies, in urban space. As creative actions, the leakage repairs amplify the intersecting and reciprocal ecology of the human and nonhuman.

Mohri has also made a series of sound and kinetic installations informed by the repair works. While leaking subways are prosaic and ubiquitous around the world, Mohri’s work points to aesthetic and ecological epistemologies and histories of public space, art, geotopographies and environment specific to Tokyo, Japan.

Dr Kristen Sharp is Director and CEO of NAS and Honorary Professor at RMIT University. Her research includes contemporary Asian art, urban space, public art, and sound art. She co-curated Mutable Ecologies: Tracing Changing Environments and Phantasms for Future Ecologies”, and co-authored Screen Ecologies: Art, Media and the Environment in the Asia-Pacific Region”. Her chapter on Yuki Mohri will soon be published in Contemporary art and ecological transformation in East and Southeast Asia (Rethinking Art’s Histories, ed. Meiqin Wang, MUP).


Art Forum

The NAS Art Forum is a weekly public lecture intended to enrich the school community with contributions by guest speakers on a broad range of subjects considered to be of interest to NAS staff, students and the public.

Previous speakers have included notable art industry professionals on subjects covering visual arts, cultural theory and humanities.

NAS Forum lectures are held Wednesday lunchtime from 12.45 – 1.30pm during teaching weeks.

Upcoming Events

The National Art School acknowledges the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation, the Traditional Owners on whose Country we meet, share and create. We pay our respects to all Gadigal Elders past and present. We celebrate the diversity, history, knowledge and creativity of all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people across Australia. 

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