Japan Society Artists (13)
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Friday 11AM to 9PM
Saturday and Sunday 11AM to 5PM
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PAST EXHIBITION
Tadanori Yokoo
September 12, 2008—September 12, 2008
Press Release
New York, NY – Held in conjunction with his first New York solo
exhibition at Friedman Benda Gallery, Japan Society presents the
lecture Tadanori Yoko by internationally acclaimed Japanese
artist Tadanori Yoko. In a dialogue moderated by independent curator
Eric C. Shiner, Yokoo offers intimate insight into his inspirations and
creative process. Tadanori Yoko takes place Friday, September 12 at
6:30 pm and is followed by a reception.
Hailed in the late 1960s as one of the world's greatest graphic
designers for his novel use of bright colors and imagery gleaned from
popular culture, Tadanori Yokoo is also respected as a painter and
installation artist who has had major retrospective shows at museums
around Japan as well as many international venues, including MoMA and
the Cartier Foundation in France. In this lecture, Yokoo shares with
audiences his views of some of his most recent graphics, paintings and
a large-scale installation to be presented at Friedman Benda Gallery.
About Tadanori Yokoo
Over the past 50 years, Tadanori Yokoo has played an integral role in
both defining and giving structure to the realm of visual culture in
post-war Japan. As the most respected graphic artist in Japan in the
1960s, Yokoo used imagery from popular culture and a bright and
eclectic color palette to design posters and advertisements that were
unique in their style and hard-hitting in their impact. Thanks to his
innovations in graphic design, Yokoo was front and center in giving the
rapidly growing economic engine of Japan a face; his peers in the
avant-garde world of art soon took notice, and he began to collaborate
with the most important names in the high arts, dance, literature and
film worlds of the period. After transitioning from the graphic arts
to the fine arts as his main focus in the 1970s, Yokoo has continued to
produce important paintings, installations and other art works that
seemingly archive the popular culture of Japan while standing as
autobiographical documents of the artist and his life at the center of
the Japan's contemporary floating world. Yokoo’s first New York solo
exhibition Tadanori Yokoo (Sept 11 - Oct 18, 2008) is on view at
Friedman Benda Gallery. Friedman Benda Gallery is located at 515 West
26th Street, NY, NY 10001. For more information, please visit
www.friedmanbenda.com.
About Eric C. Shiner
Eric C. Shiner is a curator and art historian specializing in
contemporary art. His scholarly focus is on the concept of bodily
transformation in postwar Japanese photography, painting and
performance art. Shiner was an assistant curator of the Yokohama
Triennale 2001, Japan's first ever large-scale exhibition of
international contemporary art, and the curator of Making a Home:
Japanese Contemporary Artists in New York, part of Japan Society’s
centennial celebration in 2007. He is an active writer and translator,
a contributing editor for Art AsiaPacific magazine, and an adjunct
professor of art history at Cooper Union, Pace University and Stony
Brook University.
About Japan Society
Founded in 1907 by prominent New York City business people and
philanthropists, Japan Society has evolved over 100 years into an
internationally recognized nonprofit organization presenting a full
range of programs within arts and culture, business, education, family,
and public policy. Through over 100 events annually, the Society
creates rich encounters and exchanges that offer opportunities to
experience Japanese culture; foster sustained and open dialogue on
issues important to the U.S., Japan, and East Asia; and improve access
to information on Japan.
Tickets and Information
Tadanori Yokoo takes place Friday, September 12, at 6:30pm. Tickets are
$15/$12 Japan Society Members/$10 seniors & students. Japan Society
is located at 333 East 47th Street between First and Second avenues
(accessible by the 4/5/6 at 42nd Street-Grand Central Station or the E
and V at Lexington Avenue and 53rd St.) For reservations, call the box
office at 212-715-1258. For further information call 212-832-1155 or
visit www.japansociety.org.
Tadanori Yoko is supported by Friedman Benda Gallery. |
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