Iona Rozeal Brown | |
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Born | Iona Rozeal Brown 1966 Washington D.C., USA |
Education | Pratt Institute, San Francisco Art Institute, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Yale University School of Art |
Notable work | The Blackface Paintings |
Style | Traditional Ukiyo-e Print Techniques |
Movement | Post-Soul Movement |
Rozeal is a contemporary American artist known for her colourful and complex cross cultural painting technique. She best known for her narrative canvases commenting on cultural, racial and sexual identity. A large part of her work touches on the differences between appropriation [1] and appreciation. Ultimately, Rozeals work and portrayal of pornographic prints [2] illustrates a set of politically powerful messages.
Early Life
Rozeal, born Iona Rozeal Brown, was born in Washington, DC. [3] in 1966 at the height of the civil rights movement. This African-American, contemporary artist keeps her family and personal life very private. As a child, her mother was a junior high math teacher and her father was an academic advisor at the University of the District Columbia. [4] in Washington D.C.
Education
Rozeal has an extensive education. She began her education in 1991, attending the University of Maryland for a Bachelor of Sciences in Kinesiological Sciences. She initially wanted to pursue a career in physiotherapy but her interest drifted. [5] After graduating, she attended the Montgomery County Community College in 1995, where she took a few classes. Her artistic career did not begin till her early twenties. She started her studies at the Pratt Institute of Art in Brooklyn, New York in 1996. Soon after attending Pratt, Rozeal attended the San Francisco Art Institute [6] and the Skowhegan School of painting and Sculpture, during the late 1990s, where she received her Bachelor of Fine Arts. The artist continued her education at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Here she completed her Master of Fine Arts in 2002. [7]
Early Work While receiving her master's degree at Yale, Rozeal created her first collection, A3 Black on Both Sides [A3 stands for Afro-Asiatic Allegory]. This work as described by Rozeal is a visual articulation of traditional Ukiyo-e aesthetics mixed with signifiers of hip-hop culture [8] to reflect this multicultural synergy that she was interested in understanding. This cultural hybridity reflected Asian black faced women and ultimately explored the 'rebellious' Ganguro style of the 1990s. This clash of cultures in her artwork exposed Asian appropriation of African American women. For example, Blackface #19, one of ten works in her collection, depicts a young Japanese woman sitting in a silk Kimono with traditional African Hairstyle. [9] It is assumed that the young women illustrated in the painting is a Geisha. Geishas were female performers that wore traditional kimonos and painted their faces white who danced and sang. Poking out from beneath this traditionally worn Japanese garment are blue jeans, white adidas shoes and a thick gold chain. These Afro-Asiatic characters explored the impacts of American popular culture on Japanese culture.
Rozeal's work looks at African American culture and how it has touched upon other cultures around the world, specifically Japanese culture. As a child, Rozeal accounts one of her first interactions with Japanese culture when attending a Kabuki theater performance. This type of theatrical performance, dating back to the seventeenth century, is known for its elaborate costumes and dramatized production.
Later in her life, while attending school at the San Francisco Art Institute, Rozeal's curiosity with Japanese culture grew with her encounter with the Ganguro. Ganguro, [10] sometimes referred to as Gyaru, is a fashion style that developed in the mid-1990s. With this trend, young Japanese women would darken their skin, bleach their hair and wear brightly coloured extravagant outfits. This plays a large role in her artwork. Brown expresses mixed feelings about the trend saying that this fetishization of blackness is "pretty weird, and a little offensive" (Genocchio 2004).
With this curiosity and inspiration developing during her undergraduate studies, she was determined to learn and explore the Ganguro phenomenon. Rozeal travelled abroad to Japan in 2001. Brown was interested in the artistic appropriation of African American cultural traditions. Given this, she is concerned with the construction of global identity and as a result there is an emergence of the Post-Soul [11] Aesthetic in her artwork. Her experiences abroad helped shape her questions regarding the global reconstruction and fascination of African American culture and identity.
This introduction to Afro-Asian culture extended beyond the Ganguro phenomenon and childhood exposure to Kabuki theater but also hip-hop culture. [12] Discussed in an interview in the Spring of 2003, Brown expresses that there is a well-established relationship between African American hip-hop and the influences on Asian cultures. Rozeal indicates that music that this plays a huge role in both her life and work. [13]
The artist is trained in the traditional artistry of Japanese Ukiyo-e. This style was produced in the mid-1700s and was often produced as woodblock prints and paintings and in literal terms means 'pictures of the floating world'. Artists often depict Kabuki actors, geishas, flora and fauna, landscapes, etc. Unlike early colour Ukiyo-e pieces, in which colours tended to be softer Rozeal's work is very pigmented and colourful. This was a more contemporary adaptation of ukiyo-e. Lighting and shading adds depth to pieces of work thus it is surprising Rozeal manages to maintain one-dimensionality. This means that the work is created on a flat surface, there is no depth to the illustrations.
Rozeal's work has been exhibited around the world. She has been featured in a number of solo exhibitions at numerous galleries and institutions including:
- A3 Black on Both sides (2004) at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Arts
- Iona Rozeal Brown: Matrix 152 (2004) exhibited at Wadsworth Atheneum
- The Paintings of Iona Rozeal Brown (2007) at the University of Arizona Museum of Art
- All Falls Down (2010) at Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland
- Introducing... The House of Bando (2012) in New York, NY at Salon 94
- iROZEALb (2014) at the Joslyn Art Museum
In addition to the numerous solo exhibitions Rozeal's artwork has been featured in the collections of the Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Virginia Museum of Fine arts, the National Gallery of Art, and the North Carolina Museum of Art. In 2011, she presented battle of yestermore at Skylight West commissioned for Performa 11.
Ukiyo-e is a genre of Japanese art that flourished from the 17th through 19th centuries. Its artists produced woodblock prints and paintings of such subjects as female beauties; kabuki actors and sumo wrestlers; scenes from history and folk tales; travel scenes and landscapes; flora and fauna; and erotica. The term ukiyo-e translates as 'picture[s] of the floating world'.
Utagawa Kunisada, also known as Utagawa Toyokuni III, was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist. He is considered the most popular, prolific and commercially successful designer of ukiyo-e woodblock prints in 19th-century Japan. In his own time, his reputation far exceeded that of his contemporaries, Hokusai, Hiroshige and Kuniyoshi.
Suzuki Harunobu was a Japanese designer of woodblock print art in the ukiyo-e style. He was an innovator, the first to produce full-color prints in 1765, rendering obsolete the former modes of two- and three-color prints. Harunobu used many special techniques, and depicted a wide variety of subjects, from classical poems to contemporary beauties. Like many artists of his day, Harunobu also produced a number of shunga, or erotic images. During his lifetime and shortly afterwards, many artists imitated his style. A few, such as Harushige, even boasted of their ability to forge the work of the great master. Much about Harunobu's life is unknown.
Miyagawa Isshō was a Japanese painter in the ukiyo-e style, primarily depicting kabuki actors, geisha, sumo wrestlers, and other elements of everyday urban culture. He used several other names: Fujiwara Andō, Kohensai (湖辺斎) and others; his common name was Kiheiji (喜平治).
Japonisme is a French term that refers to the popularity and influence of Japanese art and design among a number of Western European artists in the nineteenth century following the forced reopening of foreign trade with Japan in 1858. Japonisme was first described by French art critic and collector Philippe Burty in 1872.
Oiran is a collective term for the highest-ranking courtesans in Japanese history, who were considered to be above common prostitutes for their more refined entertainment skills and training in the traditional arts. Divided into a number of ranks within this category, the highest rank of oiran were the tayū, who were considered to be set apart from other oiran due to their intensive training in the traditional arts and the fact that they lived and worked in Kyoto, the political capital of Japan, which remained the cultural heart of the country when the seat of political power moved to Tokyo. Though oiran by definition also engaged in prostitution, higher-ranking oiran had a degree of choice in which customers they took; tayū, in contrast, did not engage in sex work at all.
Uemura Shōen was the pseudonym of an artist in Meiji, Taishō and early Shōwa period Japanese painting. Her real name was Uemura Tsune. Shōen was known primarily for her bijin-ga, or paintings of beautiful women, in the nihonga style, although she produced numerous works on historical themes and traditional subjects. Shōen is considered a major innovator in the bijin-ga genre despite the fact she often still used it to depict the traditional beauty standards of women. Bijin-ga gained criticism during the Taisho era while Shōen worked due to its lack of evolution to reflect the more modern statuses of women in Japan. During bijin-ga's conception in the Tokugawa, or Edo, period, women were regarded as lower class citizens and the genre often reflected this implication onto its female subjects. Within the Taisho era, women had made several advancements into the Japanese workforce, and artistry specifically was becoming more popular outside of pass times for the elite, which opened way for Shōen's success. Shōen received many awards and forms of recognition during her lifetime within Japan, being the first female recipient of the Order of Culture award, as well as being hired as the Imperial Household's official artist, which had previously only employed one other official woman in the position. In 1949 she died of cancer just a year after receiving the Order of Culture Award.
Ōta Nanpo was the most oft-used pen name of Ōta Tan, a late Edo-period Japanese poet and fiction writer. Ōta Nanpo wrote primarily in the comedic forms of kyōshi, derived from comic Chinese verse, and kyōka, derived from waka poetry. Ōta Nanpo's pennames also include Yomo no Akara (四方赤良), Yomo Sanjin, Kyōkaen, and Shokusanjin (蜀山人).
Kamigata (上方) was the colloquial term for a region today called Kansai in Japan. This large area encompasses the cities of Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe. The term was also sometimes used to refer only to Kyoto city. The term is used particularly when discussing elements of Edo period urban culture such as ukiyo-e and kabuki, and when making a comparison to the urban culture of the Edo/Tokyo region. The term was no longer used as name for the Kansai provinces when Emperor Meiji moved to Edo in 1868. An account described Kamigata suji as one of the two regions that emerged from the division of Japan for the purpose of taxation with the other being Kwanto-suji.
Utagawa Toyoharu was a Japanese artist in the ukiyo-e genre, known as the founder of the Utagawa school and for his uki-e pictures that incorporated Western-style geometrical perspective to create a sense of depth.
Yūrei-zu (幽霊図) are a genre of Japanese art consisting of painted or woodblock print images of ghosts, demons and other supernatural beings. They are considered to be a subgenre of fūzokuga, "pictures of manners and customs." These types of art works reached the peak of their popularity in Japan in the mid- to late 19th century.
Three Beauties of the Present Day is a nishiki-e colour woodblock print from c. 1792–93 by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro. The triangular composition depicts the profiles of three celebrity beauties of the time: geisha Tomimoto Toyohina, and teahouse waitresses Naniwaya Kita and Takashima Hisa. The print is also known under the titles Three Beauties of the Kansei Era and Three Famous Beauties.
Kōmei Bijin Rokkasen is a series of ukiyo-e prints designed by the Japanese artist Utamaro and published in c. 1795–96. The subjects were well-known courtesans, geisha, and others associated with the Yoshiwara pleasure districts of Edo.
On Top and Beneath Ryōgoku Bridge is a picture made up of six prints designed by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Utamaro and published in c. 1795–96. The scene depicts numerous people—mainly elegantly-dressed women of various social classes—on outings at Ryōgoku Bridge over the Sumida River in Edo. At about 75 by 60 centimetres, the assembled set is the earliest known ukiyo-e picture of such an extravagant size.
Shinagawa no Tsuki, Yoshiwara no Hana, and Fukagawa no Yuki are three hanging-scroll paintings corresponding to the themes of "moon", "flowers", and "snow", respectively. These were produced in the late 18th century by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro for the prominent merchant Zenno Ihē.
Hari-shigoto is a colour triptych print by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro. It depicts women working with cloth at home with children playing around them. Critics hold the prints in high regard, in particular the skill required to reproduce the translucent effect of the cloth with woodblock prints.
Musashino is a triptych print by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro. It is a mitate-e parody picture that alludes to the story in the 12th section of The Tales of Ise.
Kushi is a title given to a print by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro. It depicts a woman looking through a clear glass comb.
Hokkoku Goshiki-zumi is a series of five ukiyo-e prints designed by the Japanese artist Utamaro and published in c. 1794–95.
Fujin Tomari-kyaku no Zu Sanmai-tsuzuki is a triptych print by the Japanese ukiyo-e artist Kitagawa Utamaro. It depicts a group of women within a mosquito net preparing for an overnight visit.