SELECTED TRANSLATIONS
“Where Both Sides Meet: Kishio Suga in Conversation with Hans Ulrich Obrist” in Kishio Suga: Where Both Sides Meet (Museum Cobra, Amstelveen, 2025)
“Interview with Susumu Koshimizu,” The Light Observer (Issue 07, October 2024)
“Lee Ufan. Artworks Are Absolute Events. Studio Visit” (Bijutsu Techo, March 1983) in Lee Ufan (Hamburger Banhof | Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart, Berlin, 2023)
Haruo Sanda, “Lee Ufan, The Death of Expression / The Zero Degree of Expression” (Bijutsu Techo, June 1991) in Lee Ufan (Hamburger Banhof | Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart, Berlin, 2023)
Lee Ufan, “Phase—Mother Earth, or, The Arrival of Nobuo Sekine” in Tribute to Nobuo Sekine (1942–2019) (Blum & Poe Broadcasts, 2020)
Susumu Koshimizu, “Journeys with Nobuo Sekine” in Tribute to Nobuo Sekine (1942–2019) (Blum & Poe Broadcasts, 2020)
Yukinori Yanagi, “What I Wanted to Ask Sekine” in Tribute to Nobuo Sekine (1942–2019) (Blum & Poe Broadcasts, 2020)
Kishio Suga, “A Wind Blows over Mother Earth” in Tribute to Nobuo Sekine (1942–2019) (Blum & Poe Broadcasts, 2020)
Kazumi Nakamura, “On Phase of Nothingness—Oilclay” in Tribute to Nobuo Sekine (1942–2019) (Blum & Poe Broadcasts, 2020)
Kishio Suga, “Between ‘Presence’ and ‘Nothingness’” (2005) in Karla Black and Kishio Suga: A New Order (Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, 2016)
Kishio Suga: Making Sites (Itamuro Onsen Daikokuya, 2014)
Tadaaki Kuwayama: Hayama (The Museum of Modern Art, Hayama, 2012)
Aoki Noe: All that floats down (Toyota Municipal Museum of Art and Nagoya City Art Museum, 2012)
Kishio Suga’s Work from a Zen Perspective (Itamuro Onsen Daikokuya, 2008)
Yusuke Nakahara, “What Is Mono-ha?” in What is Mono-ha? (Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, 2007)
Kishio Suga, “The Multiplicity of Things” in Kishio Suga (Tomio Koyama Gallery and Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, 2006)
Yasuyuki Nakai, “Invisible Scenery” in Kishio Suga (Tomio Koyama Gallery and Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, 2006)
Nobuo Sekine: Movement, Feeling, Environment (Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, 2004)
Jane Dixon: Under False Colors (Djanogly Art Gallery and Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, 2004)