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Virtual Asian-American Art Museum Project

Alexei Taylor, Author
Introduction, page 5 of 8

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Introduction, Page 6

therefore harbor suspicions about art education in Asia, which is traditionally based in copying. American art education itself ignores most Asianist approaches to both iconography and philosophy, except in relation to Euro-American-centric ideas like postmodernism, an oversight that makes it more difficult to appreciate work based in that alternative achievement. But maybe more importantly, Japanese immigrant artists were ineligible for U.S. citizenship until 1952, nine years later than for immigrants from China. Today, we can embrace their achievements and recognize their complicated identities, which fell between the cracks of U.S. immigration laws. This early generation of artists also commonly suffered racist attacks, including being beaten and spat upon in public, even while they were celebrated for their refined artistry. This real inequity inherent in the American society of that period is important to keep in mind, as it renders the professional achievement of these individuals even more socially significant and noteworthy.

During the 1920s and 1930s, when experimentation with figuration was a hallmark of early American modernism and regionalism movements, a number of other artists of Asian ancestry developed innovative approaches to painting with ink. The most renowned of these was Yasuo Kuniyoshi (1893–1953), who was among the best-known American artists during the period between the First and Second World Wars, although his fame has faded considerably since his death. Although Kuniyoshi was primarily an oil painter, he also created many images using ink on paper that are too richly modeled to be described simply as “drawings.” Kuniyoshi said he was interested in creating an “East-West” stylistic fusion, balancing working with ink and copious white space in compositions that also reflected his quirky rendering style inspired by American folk art. His sensuous 1924 drawing Leaves in a Vase (Fig. 4), in the collection of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, is an example of his sophisticated synthesis. Noboru Foujioka was an artist closely associated with Kuniyoshi’s circle who lived in both New York and California during this period and was also primarily an oil painter. He created ink sketches that give his 1920s subjects, like the woman in one untitled work (Fig. 5), the immediacy of Zen painting’s fresh and uninhibited brushwork.
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