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Tuesday, November 19, 2024 |
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Fergus McCaffrey Tokyo exhibiton celebrates the centennial of the birth of two Gutai artists |
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Installation view of Kazuo Shiraga & Akira Kanayama: Plus-Minus, at Fergus McCaffrey Tokyo, 2024. Photo by Ryuichi Maruo. Courtesy of Fergus McCaffrey.
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TOKYO.- Featuring revolutionary robot paintings by Akira Kanayama (1924-2006) and foot paintings by Kazuo Shiraga (1924-2008) Fergus McCaffrey Tokyo will present an exhibition that celebrates the centennial of the birth of both Gutai artists. Plus Minus focuses on both artists highly individualistic and innovative methods of painting that fulfilled the Gutai mantra of Making art that has never been seen before.
Kanayama and Shiraga were born in Amagasaki, Japan and were friends from childhood. Both aspired to be artists and studied art theory together in the late 1940s before forming the avant-garde collective Zero Society in 1952 (along with Saburo Murakami and later Atsuko Tanaka). They exhibited their works together in 1954, featuring Kanayamas reductive Mondrian-like geometric lines and Shiragas early finger and foot paintings, which prompted Shiragas Plus-Minus philosophy of art.
The avant-garde nature of Kanayamas minimalist conceptualism and Shiragas maximalist expressionism attracted the attention of Jiro Yoshihara in early 1955 who invited both artists to join the Gutai Artist Association (along with Saburo Murakami and Atsuko Tanaka); and the former members of Zero Society rapidly became the leading lights of Gutai, as they explored interactive and performance art in the open air and on the stage between 1955-57.
The mature styles of both artists painting were fully formed before joining the Gutai Group in 1955, and as painting came to the fore in Gutai beginning around 1957, Kanayama continued his focus on removing the artists gesture while Shiraga emphasizing and amplifying it. Shiragas first large-scale foot paintings made while swinging from a rope emerged in 1956, and Kanayama's first mechanical paintings made with battery powered remote control childrens cars that he adapted to carry pens or punctured cans of paint in 1957.
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