Matsumi Kanemitsu

Last updated
Landscape by Matsumi Kanemitsu, 1967, Honolulu Museum of Art 'Landscape' by Matsumi Kanemitsu, 1967, Honolulu Museum of Art.JPG
Landscape by Matsumi Kanemitsu, 1967, Honolulu Museum of Art

Matsumi "Mike" Kanemitsu (May 28, 1922- May 11, 1992) was a Japanese-American painter who was also proficient in Japanese style sumi and lithography. [1]

Contents

Kanemitsu was born to Japanese parents in Ogden, Utah on May 28, 1922. At age three, he was taken to Japan and grew up in a suburb of Hiroshima with his grandparents. [2] [3] He returned to the United States in 1940 and enlisted in the United States Army in 1941 at Fort Douglas, at which point he renounced his Japanese citizenship and became solely an American citizen. [3] [4] He was arrested after the attack on Pearl Harbor, and interned. While interned, he began drawing with supplies provided by the American Red Cross. After his release, Kanemitsu enlisted in the Army and served as a hospital assistant in Europe. In 1946, he was discharged from the Army and undertook formal art education with Fernand Léger in Paris, with Karl Metzler in Baltimore, and with Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League of New York beginning in 1951. [4] [5] [6] Among the jobs he took to support himself while in art school was a position as director of entertainment in a Baltimore gambling hall, where he oversaw the striptease dancers. [6] While at the Art Students League he associated with artists such as Paul Jenkins, Warren Brandt, Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, Robert Motherwell, Willem and Elaine de Kooning, and others. [6] By 1958 he was firmly entrenched in abstract expressionism and was close with Norman Bluhm. [6] In the 1950s and early 60s he received two Longview Foundation awards and a Ford Foundation Fellowship to practice lithography at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop in Los Angeles. [4] He moved to Los Angeles in 1961, [7] in part due to his dislike of the rise of Pop Art in New York, [4] and was on the faculty of Chouinard Art Institute from 1965 to 1970, California Institute of the Arts from 1970 to 1971, and the Otis College of Art and Design from 1971 to 1983. In 1990, along with fellow artist Nancy Uyemura and two dealers from Japan, he opened Gallery IV, which showed both local Los Angeles artists and Japanese artists. [8] Kanemitsu died of lung cancer at his home in Los Angeles on May 11, 1992. [9] [8]

In 2018, Kanemitsu's former home at 800 Traction Avenue in Los Angeles was set to be landmarked by the city, but controversy erupted over the erasure of its history as the home of a number of Japanese-American artists, including Kanemitsu. [10]

Though he painted representational works in the early 1950s, Kanemitsu is generally considered a second-generation abstract expressionist. [3] [11] Later in the 1950s, with the support of Frank O'Hara and Harold Rosenberg, he was able to show his work at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, and the Radich Gallery. [3] He is best known for his non-objective paintings, which are often hard-edge, such as Landscape, from 1967, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art.

Public Collections

Related Research Articles

Kisho Kurokawa Japanese Metabolist architect (1934–2007)

Kisho Kurokawa was a leading Japanese architect and one of the founders of the Metabolist Movement.

Richard Diebenkorn American painter

Richard Diebenkorn was an American painter and printmaker. His early work is associated with abstract expressionism and the Bay Area Figurative Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. In the late 1960s he began his extensive series of geometric, lyrical abstract paintings. Known as the Ocean Park paintings, these paintings were instrumental to his achievement of worldwide acclaim.

Leon Golub

Leon Golub was an American painter. He was born in Chicago, Illinois, where he also studied, receiving his BA at the University of Chicago in 1942, and his BFA and MFA at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1949 and 1950, respectively.

Takashi Murakami Japanese artist

Takashi Murakami is a Japanese contemporary artist. He works in fine arts media as well as commercial and is known for blurring the line between high and low arts. He coined the term "superflat," which describes both the aesthetic characteristics of the Japanese artistic tradition and the nature of postwar Japanese culture and society, and is also used for Murakami's artistic style and other Japanese artists he has influenced.

Shinsui Itō

Shinsui Itō was the pseudonym of a Nihonga painter and ukiyo-e woodblock print artist in Taishō- and Shōwa-period Japan. He was one of the great names of the shin-hanga art movement, which revitalized the traditional art after it began to decline with the advent of photography in the early 20th century. His real name was Itō Hajime.

Akio Takamori was a Japanese-American ceramic sculptor and was a faculty member at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington.

June Wayne

June Claire Wayne was an American painter, tapestry innovator, printmaker, and educator. She founded the Tamarind Lithography Workshop (1960–1970), a former California-based nonprofit print shop dedicated to lithography.

Ei-Q was a Japanese artist who worked in a variety of media, including photography and engraving.

Kobayashi Keisei is a Japanese printmaker, hanga artist, and wood engraving artist. He has also made their patterns more complicated. Techniques, such as composition of more two wood plates and what called "Kagami-Bari" technique.

Virginia Dwan is an American art collector, art patron, philanthropist, visionary and founder of the Dwan Light Sanctuary in Montezuma, New Mexico. She is the former owner and executive director of Dwan Gallery, Los Angeles (1959–1967) and Dwan Gallery New York (1965–1971), a contemporary art gallery closely identified with the American movements of Minimalism, Conceptual Art, and Earthworks.

Robert Kushner(; born 1949, Pasadena, CA) is an American contemporary painter who is known especially for his involvement in Pattern and Decoration. He has been called "a founder" of that artistic movement. In addition to painting, Kushner creates installations in a variety of mediums, from large-scale public mosaics to delicate paintings on antique book pages.

Takesada Matsutani is a Japanese contemporary mixed-media artist. He was a member of the Gutai group from 1963 to the dissolution of the group in 1972. His well-known work involves a technique of blowing a gust of air into a puddle of vinyl wood glue, creating bulges, bubbles, and drips, then covered by patient strokes of graphite pencil. Matsutani's works are represented in a large number of prestigious art museums and collections around the world. In 2002 the artist, who has lived a large part of his childhood in Nishinomiya, received the Nishinomiya City Cultural Award.

Kishio Suga Japanese artist

Kishio Suga, is a Japanese sculptor and installation artist currently living in Itō, Shizuoka, Japan.

Koji Enokura Japanese artist

Kōji Enokura was a Japanese painter and installation artist.

Susumu Koshimizu is a Japanese sculptor and an installation artist.

Madokoro Akutagawa Saori was a Japanese painter whose works were often associated with primitivism, folkloric and mythological subjects, as well as unique dyeing techniques. Her paintings in the 1950s manifest various themes from distorted and dramatic portrayal of women to divine narratives based on traditional Japanese folklores. After briefly studying and living in the US, Akutagawa shifted her artistic exploration towards abstraction before her death at a young age in 1966.

Chris Gustin is an American ceramicist. Gustin models his work on the human form, which is shown through the shape, color, and size of the pieces.

Saburo Murakami was a Japanese visual and performance artist. He was a member of the Gutai Art Association and is best known for his paper-breaking performances (kami-yaburi) in which he burst through kraft paper stretched on large wooden frames. Paper-breaking is a canonical work in the history of Japanese post-war art and for the history of performance art. Murakami’s work includes paintings, three-dimensional objects and installation as well as performance, and is characterized by a highly conceptual approach that transcends dualistic thinking and materializes in playful interactive forms and often thematizes time, chance and intuition.

Katsuhiro Yamaguchi was a Japanese artist and art theorist based in Tokyo and Yokohama. Through his collaborations, writings, and teaching, he promoted an interdisciplinary avant-garde in postwar Japan that served as the foundation for the emergence of Japanese media art in the early 1980s, a field in which he remained active until his death. He represented Japan at the 1968 Venice Biennale and the 1975 Bienal de São Paulo, and served as producer for the Mitsui Pavilion at Expo '70 in Osaka.

Waichi Tsutaka was a Japanese visual artist, mainly known as painter and poet.

References

Footnotes

  1. New York Times obituary, May 16, 1992
  2. Rogers, Marjorie J. (2011). "Los Angeles Art Community: Group Portrait". Calisphere.
  3. 1 2 3 4 カネミツマツミ・金光松美 : 1950-90年 : 二つの祖国, 戦後アメリカ画壇に生きた日系人画家 /. Ōsaka-fu. 1998.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Nordland, Gerald. "Matsumi Kanemitsu: The Man and His Work." In Kanemitsu, Matsumi, ed. Osaka Prefectural Government, 176-180. Osaka: Osaka-fu, 1998
  5. Yau, John, "Kanemitsu in California during the 1960s and 1970s", The Brooklyn Rail, May 6, 2008
  6. 1 2 3 4 Slivka, Rose C.S. "Matsumi Kanemitsu: A Memoir, A History, and A Tribute." In Kanemitsu, Matsumi, ed. Osaka Prefectural Government, 181-184. Osaka: Osaka-fu, 1998.
  7. "Artists | Drawing the Line | Japanese American National Museum". www.janm.org. Retrieved 2019-09-13.
  8. 1 2 Uyemura, Nancy. "Kanemitsu: An Artist's Artist." In Kanemitsu, Matsumi, ed. Osaka Prefectural Government, 185-186. Osaka: Osaka-fu, 1998.
  9. New York Times obituary, May 16, 1992
  10. Swann, Jennifer (2018-02-21). "Landmarking Arts District lofts ignores Japanese American history, artists say". Curbed. Retrieved 2019-09-13.
  11. Matsumi Kanemitsu on ArtNet
  12. David Richard Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico