‘Suffocated’: Art becomes form of protest against Olympics

Designer Susumu Kikutake speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in Tokyo, Wednesday, June 9, 2021. An online article showcasing his design calling for the Olympics to be cancelled resulted in harsh online comments, and he sold only around 10 shirts a month before the pandemic. But demand for the t-shirts has boomed in the past two months, with sales reaching 100 shirts in April and 250 in May. The characters on the shirt read "Cancelation, Cancelation". (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

People who are against the Tokyo 2020 Olympics set to open in July, march around Tokyo’s National Stadium, during an anti-Olympics demonstration May 9. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

People against the Tokyo 2020 Olympics set to open in July, march May 9 in protest around Tokyo’s National Stadium during an anti-Olympics demonstration. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)

Japanese artist Miwako Sakauchi speaks about her art work for Art Exhibition "Declaration of the end of Olympic games" in Chiba near Tokyo, Thursday, June 10, 2021. Polls have found an overwhelming majority of Japanese people are skeptical of the Tokyo Olympics being held this summer during a pandemic, but only a few have publicly marched to protest. But there are creative projects that are looking to protest the increasingly unpopular Tokyo Olympics, even as authorities seek to shut them down. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Japanese artist Miwako Sakauchi speaks about her art work for Art Exhibition "Declaration of the end of Olympic games" in Chiba near Tokyo Thursday, June 10, 2021. Sakauchi created the paintings after she was contacted by a group of artists who organized an anti-Olympics art exhibit last summer. Her works were displayed in another exhibition in February. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Designer Susumu Kikutake shows anti-Olympics T-shirt during an interview with the Associated Press in Tokyo, June 9. An online article showcasing his design calling for the Olympics to be cancelled resulted in harsh online comments, and he sold only around 10 shirts a month before the pandemic. But demand for the t-shirts has boomed in the past two months, with sales reaching 100 shirts in April and 250 in May. The characters on the shirt read “Cancelation, Cancelation.”. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

Japanese artist Miwako Sakauchi speaks about her art work for Art Exhibition “Declaration of the end of Olympic games” in Chiba near Tokyo, June 10. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Doctor Sachihiro Ochi holds his work during an interview with the Associated Press in Yokohama near Tokyo, Tuesday. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)

TOKYO — Miwako Sakauchi stands in her studio and brushes spinning swirls on torn cardboard and drawing paper, using the five colors designated as symbols of the modern Olympiad.