Exhibition at Karma introduces Los Angeles to Sadamasa Motonaga
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, November 4, 2024


Exhibition at Karma introduces Los Angeles to Sadamasa Motonaga
Sadamasa Motonaga, Sakuhin, 1965. Oil paint and resin on canvas, 36 × 45⅞ in.



LOS ANGELES, CA.- Karma presents an exhibition of paintings by Sadamasa Motonaga, open from May 23 to June 20 at 7351 Santa Monica Boulevard.

Spanning five decades of work, this presentation introduces Los Angeles to Sadamasa Motonaga, a unique figure whose trajectory bridges contemporary Japanese Superflat painting with the existential artistic concerns of the immediate postwar era. Motonaga was born in 1922 in Japan’s mountainous Mie Prefecture. After working on the railroads and in munitions plants during World War II, the self-taught painter became a founding member of the Gutai Art Association, an avant-garde movement formed in reaction against the country’s restriction of art to nationalistic ends. As a part of Gutai, he created some of Japan’s most iconic pieces of installation art by tinting water and smoke with vibrant colors while also inventing a new style of painting using poured synthetic resin pigments. Gutai’s boundary-breaking celebration of children’s art, emphasis on physicality and play, and leveling of artistic hierarchies emboldened Motonaga to integrate the biomorphic shapes from the manga he had drawn since his childhood into his paintings, an approach that would continue until his death in 2011. Over the course of his artistic life, Motonaga’s paintings remained ever optimistic and immediate, influenced by popular culture and the avant-garde in equal measure.

Sakuhin (1965), the earliest work in the show, marks the tail end of his high Gutai period. Instructed by the movement’s leader Hiro Yoshihara to make “pictures that have never been seen before,” Motonaga turned an accidental paint spill into a signature technique. Working on the floor, he streamed highly liquid resins into each other and manipulated his canvases to control their flow. This method borrowed from the historical Japanese wet-on-wet painting technique tarashikomi, or “dripping in.” At the same time, manga remained a central influence—white oil paint slicing into the two forms in Sakuhin bisect their flowing interiors, becoming open mouths that animate the two entities. In 1966, during a yearlong stay in downtown New York on an invitation by the Japan Society, gallerist Martha Jackson introduced him to Liquitex, an acrylic paint that did not yet exist in Japan, and Motonaga, who was inspired by the use of airbrush in Pop art by people like James Rosenquist, began experimenting with spraying it onto his canvases. Untitled (1967) features a trademark Motonaga shape that resembles an upside-down letter T, or perhaps a top hat, its red contours buzzing with a corona-like aura that fades from green into blue.

Back in Japan at the end of the 1960s with his wife and young son, Motonaga published the first of what would become a suite of twenty-six illustrated children’s books starring the organic, hand-drawn characters that feature in his paintings. While his books introduced his art to a non-specialized audience, he aimed for his paintings to communicate the freedom of imagination evident in children’s drawings in a high-art context. In the painting Howa Howa (1978), twin bodies made of curved forms float above an uneven horizon line, their outlines shadowed against a subtly shifting sky. At once suggestive of manga characters and utterly abstract, these entities illustrate Motonaga’s fusion of cartooning with an avant-garde sensibility that refuses the instant revelation of meaning or narrative. In the 1990s, he returned to earlier experiments with poured paint and combined them with his signature forms, as is evident in White Linear Shape (1992) and Yellow Shape and White Flow (1993), both of which feature two-dimensional drawn shapes and free-flowing, wet-on-wet swirls.

Motonaga’s collapse of high and low, as well as his insistence on the validity of ideas drawn from manga in the realm of high art, prefigured the Superflat generation’s appropriation of Japanese popular culture and graphic arts. While Takashi Murakami was coming to prominence with his anime-influenced art at the turn of the century, Motonaga was decades-deep into his avant-garde interpretation of the static manga from his youth. In Two Yellows (1997) and White Circle with Cross Stripes (2004), the double-figure composition of the 1965 Sakuhin reemerges, even more explicitly suggestive of a pair of beings due to the minimal, looped line through each circle that suggest a mouth and an eye. Overlap is Yellow and Green (1997) features the same T-form as 1967’s Untitled, this time multiplied against a splattered red field as if they have become their own species of imagined creatures. Motonaga’s humorous, mutating characters speak of the infinite possibilities implied in freeing oneself from the tyranny of so-called adult seriousness.










Today's News

May 23, 2024

Orlando Museum of Art gets a gift with strings and tries to cut them

Exhibition explores 300 years of cross-cultural exchange between the Islamic world and the Dutch and Flemish

New archeological discoveries revealed during conservation in the Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta on Torcello

A painting in the collections of the Nationalmuseum recently attributed to the famous artist Carel Fabritius

Victorian photographs that helped to preserve some of London's most historic buildings

Inside Reese Witherspoon's literary empire

David Redden, who brought ingenuity to the auction block, dies at 75

Elvis' granddaughter sues to block sale of Graceland, charging fraud

Bard Graduate Center appoints Director of Exhibitions and Chief Curator, Julia Siemon

Galerie Eva Presenhuber opens the gallery's sixth solo exhibition with the US-American artist Josh Smith

Now one fast train from Tokyo: Culture, crafts and hot springs

Marriott International is 2024 recipient of the National Building Museum Honor Award

Aliza Nisenbaum joins Regen Projects

Asian art, jewelry, and fine art departments highlight Michaan's Auction's Summer Fine Sale

Exhibition of new photographs by Laura Letinsky opens at Yancey Richardson

A many-splendored self-portrait of the artist

Review: Rocking out, and falling in love, in 'The Lonely Few'

National Gallery of Art acquires four sculptures by 20th- and 21st-century artists

Masterpieces from an important private art collection hit the auction block at Cowley Abbott

American Academy in Rome presents 'A Moment in Time: Xu Bing in Rome'

Asian Cultural Council gala raises nearly $1.6 million

Beaverbrook Art Gallery unveils major expansion of art collection

Exhibition at Karma introduces Los Angeles to Sadamasa Motonaga

Gold medallion presented to a hero of the Windsor Castle fire comes to auction at John Nicholson's

Andi Pei, along with "Wehnu Saï," sweeps international awards, earning widespread acclaim for artistic achievements.

Play Free Online Baccarat - No Download Needed At onlineplayslots.com!

The Cost of Health: Navigating WeGovy Pricing in 2024

The Essentials of Prada Sunglasses and General Sunglasses

Discover the Visionaries Behind Dubai's Skyline

Azzalure: Everything You Need to Know in 2024

Limited Time Only: Unveiling the New Škoda Octavia Limited Edition for Sale

Custom eLearning Solutions: Tailored Education for Modern Needs




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful