SALT LAKE CITY, UT.- Chiura Obata, a Japanese American artist whose life story is as captivating as his art, is the subject of a major retrospective on view at the
Utah Museum of Fine Arts.
Chiura Obata: An American Modern, the first internationally traveling survey of the artists work, features more than 150 watercolors, paintings, prints, and screens, from intimate ikebana studies to grand landscapes of the American West. The exhibition includes more than 30 drawings and paintings documenting his forced internment during World War II, including many scenes from the Topaz Relocation Center near Delta, Utah, where he was held 19421943. Many images have never been on public display.
Obatas faith in the power of art, his devotion to preserving the myriad grandeur of what he called Great Nature, and his compelling personal story as an immigrant and an American all make Obata and his art as relevant to our contemporary moment as ever, says ShiPu Wang, exhibition curator and professor of art history and visual culture at the University of California, Merced.
Born in Okayama, Japan, Obata emigrated to the United States in 1903 and embarked on a seven-decade career, working primarily in California. His rise as an artist paralleled not only the growth of an international American art but also xenophobic laws and the mass incarceration of Americans of Japanese descent during WWII. A leading figure in Northern Californias art community, he was an influential art professor at the University of California, Berkeley, for twenty-two yearsa tenure interrupted by more than a years internment at the Tanforan Assembly Center in California and at Topaz in Utah, where he founded art schools. He died in 1975.
The exhibition showcases Obatas rich and varied body of work:
early nihonga (Japanese-style painting) studies from his youth in Japan
illustrations he made as an artist-reporter in San Francisco, including of the 1906 earthquake
playful sumi-e (Japanese ink painting) of animals, plants, people, and places
California landscapes, ink scrolls, and woodblock prints of Yosemite and the High Sierra, for which he is best known
iconic images documenting life as an internee in Utah
vibrant paintings from the post-WWII era that affirm his stature as a modern artist in command of diverse styles and techniques that melded Japanese traditions with European-American modernism.
Visitors familiar with the UMFAs collection of western and European landscapes will revel in how Obata celebrates the physical beauty of California and the West, including the stark desert landscape around Topaz, says Luke Kelly, UMFA associate curator of collections and antiquities, who organized the exhibition for Salt Lake City. His brush makes the bleakest places the most alluring.
Obatas work was featured prominently in When Words Werent Enough: Works on Paper from Topaz, 19421945 (2015), the inaugural exhibition for the Topaz Museum in Delta. Obatas work is also in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and other institutions.
Chiura Obata: An American Modern was organized by the Art, Design & Architecture Museum at the University of California, Santa Barbara, where it was on view earlier this year. After the show closes September 2 at the UMFA, it travels to the Okayama Prefectural Museum of Art in Okayama, Japan (January 18March 10, 2019); the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, California (June 23September 29, 2019); and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC (November 1, 2019April 12, 2020).