Yoshitomo Nara (MOMA)

Yoshitomo Nara is a Japanese painter, sculptor and draughtsman. He was born December 5, 1959. Yoshitomo recieved his B.F.A and M.F.A from the Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and Music in 1987. He also studied Art at Kunstakademie Düsseldorf (German State Academy of Arts), Düsseldorf, Germany in 1993. Growing up, Yoshitomo was a shy kid and very sensitive. He had sibling, but they were much older so they weren’t really around. Both his parents had jobs and he was alone through a lot of his childhood. He says that his childhood loneliness fuels the creativity for much of his work. “When you are a kid, you are too young to know you are lonely, sad, and upset,” he told ARTnews ‘ Kay Itoi. “Now I know I was.” In high school he experienced art for the first time and was astounded that he could finally express himself.

After gaining his M.F. A. he headed to Germany. He lived here for several years in a city called Koln. Yoshitomo began to look inside of himself for art. He explored his self conscience and from this he created one of the first of his sad little girl portraits. “When I make the drawings, I don’t think of it,” he told Asahi Shimbun. “My brush just moves unconsciously.”

Some critics hate his work. It is very childlike. The subject of most of his work is a chubby cheek little girl with slanted eyes. He also draws little dogs frequently too.

His works have an air of simplicity. The subject is full of angst with a piercing gaze. In the 1990’s Yoshitomo aquired a huge fan base. He became an international artist. He has had shows in Japan, Korea, Germany, and the US. He has become so popular that his work can be seen  on shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, where a character of the show is wearing a shirt with his design on it.

Yoshitomo was arrested in NYC for drawing a smiley face on the wall near the First Ave L train stop. He was detained overnight. He was charged with making graffiti and mischief conduct. The charges were dropped later that year. Yoshitomo says he liked the experience because he met people he wouldn’t have other wise. The brick he drew on was washed clean. Apparently, the transit workers had no idea that the brick Yoshitomo drew on could have generated $10,000 if they had sold it.

Pieces by Yoshitomo can generate upwards of a million dollars. While pricey works are sold, he also has key chains and other items that are sold for only a few bucks. He has mass appeal. I instantly loved his work when I saw it at the MOMA. I also feel like he is an artist that I can relate to on an emotional level. Yoshitomo still feels lonely sometimes and has to constantly remind himself of all the good things that has been said about his work. He tries to work freely and without feeling  pressured, to just create art for the joy of it. Yoshitomo keeps these words posted: “Never forget your beginner’s spirit.” He applies this idea to his work every day.

 

Frida and Diego at the Moma

One of my favorite real life dramas is the saga that is the life and art of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. I was very excited to see the work of two of my favorite artists at the Moma. I have been interested in Frida Kahlo for many years. Her life was so tragic and exciting. She never let herself be confined by social standards, yet could not escape the limitations imposed by her own broken body. Wrecked by an unfortunate accident, she was forced to live in pain and immobility for most of her adult life. While confined to her bed, most likely recovering from her most recent surgery, she painted. Her paintings were very personal, mostly about her own pain or fears. They were who she was inside. I feel a connection to her because of the personal nature of her paintings haunting images. She endured more than most could be expected to bear, yet somehow a beautiful spirit, full of freedom of thought, persisted. I admire her so much for that. She is a mexican artist who paints a human experience which evokes nameless emotion.

Her husband Diego Rivera, an older more famous artist at the time, paints in a way that has little to do with his personal feelings at all. In fact his work represents the collective experience of an entire country. He found his inspiration from the plight of those in need of a voice. He painted murals for the masses around him, instead of galleries where only the wealthy could afford to buy art. He represented the needs of the poor.

The combination of these two personalities was like fireworks. Their was passion, intellect, betrayal and reconciliation. Their relationship reads like a tragic soap opera. Their work lives up to their biographies. Frida’s painting are small and intense, most of them painted from her bed. Diego’s were massive and imposing. Together they are a rare example of two people who found each other and made art that defined an era in Mexico.

 

MoMA – The Museum of Modern Art: Van Gogh

After getting up early in the morning, walking for a “couple” of blocks, and taking the subway five times, the group finally got to the MoMA. This museum is six stories high and filled with pieces that could leave you staying there for about a good week. On the fifth floor, the museum houses the work of Vincent Van Gogh. Vincent Van Gogh was born on March 30, 1853 and died 29 July 1890.  He was a Dutch post impressionist Painter. Van Gogh loved art from an early age and began to draw as a child.  He continued making drawings throughout his early life leading to his decision to become an artist. He did not begin painting until his late twenties. He produced more than 2,100 artworks, consisting of 860 oil paintings and more than 1,300 watercolors, drawings, sketches and prints. One of his early aspirations was to become a pastor and from 1879 he worked as a missionary in a mining region in Belgium where he began to sketch people from the local community.

In the exhibit holds one of Van Gogh’s famous pieces “The Starry Night.” The paint is applied thickly, so that the brush strokes build up on top of each other

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Portrait of Joseph Roulin, a postal employee in the southern French town of Arles; one of the few closest friends that Vincent Van go did a portrait of.

Vincent van Gogh’s paintings are just filled with so much color and beauty that it’s kinda sad when you learn about his death; he died at the age of  37  from suicide, a gunshot wound to the head. Even though he died at such a young age he was still a wonderful artist and the world will always remember him.