Fumio Kitaoka | Japanese, 1918-2007, "Ishigaki Village, Okinawa", 1981, Polychrome Woodblock Print, Pencil Signed & Dated
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Image size: 12 X 16 inches. Signed & dated in pencil & annotated with title (in Kanji) & "69/100", printed on hand-made cream Japan kozo paper watermarked "Fumio Kitaoka" , 14.5 X 18 inch sheet. Fine condition. Free shipping to US address. (902156 bx-126) Note: Fumio Kitaoka (Tokyo, born, 1918) is one of Japan's finest woodcut masters of the latter twentieth century. He first studied printmaking techniques & drawing under Unichi Hiratsuka (1895-1997) at the Tokyo Bijutsu Gakko. Graduating during the Second World War, Kitaoka first taught art in Tokyo & in January 1945 was posted to a similar position in occupied Manchuria. His experiences in China led to the social realist series of 17 prints Journey to the Native Country (1947) chronicling his difficult repatriation to Japan. After returning to Tokyo he attended the evening classes of one of Japan's most influential woodblock artists, Koshiro Onchi (1891-1955) joining Onchi's First Thursday Society & contributing prints to its publication Ichimokushū in 1947 & 1948. The following year Kitaoka created the series The Face of Tokyo, five portfolios of prints documenting the beginning resurgence of post-war Japan. [See this collection's print Around Ochanomizu (Kanda River).] in 1955, Kitaoka moved to Paris to study wood engraving techniques at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He was not interested in formal theories of art, but he sought to understand the work of Western painters such as Van Gogh, Cezanne, Matisse & Picasso. Upon returning to Japan in 1957, he firmly established himself as a contemporary master of the woodblock. His woodblock art was almost immediately distinguished for his use of perspective & receding space combined with the bold & almost sculptural effects he achieved by printing his blocks under very high pressure. As one can see in Fishing Boat & Green Crow (left), this lends a powerful, almost three dimensional effect to foreground objects. in the mid-60s, Kitaoka taught at the Minneapolis School of Art & at Pratt Graphic Arts Center in New York. For years, the woodcut art of Fumio Kitaoka has been the subject of many exhibitions in Japan, America & Europe. Museums that list his woodcuts within their permanent collections include, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, The Art Institute of Chicago, the National Museum, Warsaw & the Japanese Museum of Israel. Fumio Kitaoka has been named an honorary member of the Japan Print association & has served as Director of the Japanese Artists Association. He died of pneumonia on April 23 2007. (source: Lavenberg Collection) Fumio Kitaoka | Japanese, 1918-2007, "Ishigaki Village, Okinawa", 1981, Polychrome Woodblock Print, Pencil Signed & Dated

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