
SHIMURA Nobuhiro, Dress, 2012/2015 Photo: KATO Ken
A conversation between SHIMURA Nobuhiro, an exhibiting artist in “Listening to the Inner Voice: The Art of Living True”, and KINOSHITA Tomotake, who is familiar with SHIMURA’s work.
*This event will be conducted in Japanese with Japanese Sign Language.
| Title | Related Event of "Listening to the Inner Voice" Talk Event | SHIMURA Nobuhiro × KINOSHITA Tomotake |
|---|---|
| Date and Time | Friday, 31 July, 2026 7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. |
| Venue | Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery, Gallery 1 |
| Speakers | SHIMURA Nobuhiro (Artist), KINOSHITA Tomotake(Historian, Representative, Shuwa Map) |
| Admission | Free |
| Capacity | Around 20 people[Advance application required/Lottery-based selection] |
| How to participate | ● If you would like to join this event, please fill out the Booking form below. *Registration Period: From 0:00 a.m. on Tuesday, 30 June, 2026 to 11:59 p.m. on Sunday, 19 July, 2026 *If there are a large number of applications, a lottery will be held. The result of the lottery will be sent to winners only by e-mail before Thursday, 23 July, 2026. |
| Language | Japanese (Japanese sign-language interpretation provided) |
| Inquiry | Tokyo Shibuya Koen-dori Gallery, Talk Event section Email: skdg-event2026(at) mot-art.jp * Please change (at) to @. Tel: 03-5422-3151 |

Photo: MARUO Ryuichi
Born in 1982, in Tokyo. Currently based in Katori City, Chiba Prefecture. Shimura completed the Imaging Arts and Sciences graduate course at Musashino Art University. His practice encompasses video installations featuring everyday objects and familiar landscapes, as well as numerous site-specific works that bring the history and memory of a place to the surface. In recent years, he has incorporated documentary methods into his practice, producing film and video works that shed light on overlooked histories and social issues.

Photo: Yuki Moriya
Born in 1977, in Fukuoka. Researcher, Institute for Liberal Arts, Institute of Science Tokyo. Ph.D. in Engineering. KINOSHITA's research focuses on the history of disability, architectural planning, and architectural history. Through historical records of people with disabilities, particularly those related to Mōa gakko—historical institutions that provided education and vocational training for blind and deaf individuals and that preceded today’s schools for the blind and the deaf—he explores the formation of the concept of disability and the histories of disability communities that formed, changed, and sometimes faded over time in modern Japan. He is also the director of Shuwa Map, an initiative that promotes accessible environments for deaf, hard-of-hearing, and late-deafened people to participate in museum exhibitions and events.
Related Event of Listening to the Inner Voice
Artists and representatives from "Listening to the Inner Voice" will talk about the artists’ work.
Related Event of "Listening to the Inner Voice"