Tomason

a useless structure that has been preserved, as part of a built environment, which has become a piece of art in itself

A Tomason (トマソン), also spelled Thomason and Thomasson in English,[1] is a kind of conceptual art or found art. Gempei Akasegawa created this word to describe certain kinds of useless parts of buildings or roads.[2] These have lost their purpose as the environment around them changed.[3] This kind of art is not made on purpose, but becomes art when people observe and recognize it.

A Tomason "tunnel" with a train track running through it

Origin of the name

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Akasegawa named this special kind of "art" after an American baseball player who joined the Yomiuri Giants in 1981. Gary Thomasson became famous in Japan for getting the biggest baseball contract ever, then playing very poorly and retiring early.[4]

Types of Tomason

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Tomason can be grouped by features they have in common. These include: "useless stairways", "pointless doorways", "overhangs", "blocked windows", "sealed up walls", "A-bomb type", High places (高所, kōsho) (doors opening from a high place into open air), "outies", "poundcakes", "atago" (strange bumps or things sticking up out of the road for no reason), "premature burial" (when a wall is built partly covering an existing feature), and more.

References

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  1. "On Tomason, Or The Flipside Of Dame Architecture," February 4, 2008; retrieved 2012-4-26.
  2. Munroe, Alexandra. (1994). Japanese Art After 1945: Scream Against the Sky, p. 222.
  3. Wee, Darryl Jingwen. "Roadside Observation," Archived 2012-06-08 at the Wayback Machine Néojaponisme, January 28, 2008; retrieved 2012-4-26.
  4. Prakash, Gyan and Kevin Michael Kruse. (2008). The Spaces of the Modern City: Imaginaries, Politics, and Everyday Life, p. 397 n25.

Other websites

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