Yuki Katsura.
Matsui, Midori
TOKYO
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART TOKYO
Yuki Katsura (1913-1991) was a female pioneer of the avant-garde
whose prolific career encompassed the diverse fields of painting,
collage, book design, and illustration, as well as writing essays and
travelogues. This impressive range was fully on view in the
comprehensive retrospective organized by Naoko Seki, the senior curator
of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo (Mur), in collaboration with
fellow MOT curator Mihoko Nishikawa and the curatorial team at the
Shimonoseki City Art Museum (where the show traveled subsequently) to
celebrate the centennial of the artist's birth.
The installation at MOT, the show's initial venue, in
particular, created a space of hermeneutic pilgrimage, in which visitors
could walk through five sections featuring the major phases of
Katsura's artistic career, thereby gaining insight into the motives
of her stylistic transformations. The first two sections featured
Katsura's prewar collaged and multilayered figurative paintings and
the cartoonlike, satirical paintings she produced in the early to
mid-1950s. By arranging Katsura's works of the period, including
sketches, collages, and illustrations for children's books, to show
the development of her "three fundamental techniques," these
sections presented the technical and ideological foundation of her
protean career as a cycle of repeated reinvention, in which she
continually reorganized three basic formal principles in reaction to the
massive and often contradictory shifts in the social order of the
postwar world.
The three fundamental methods of Katsura's artistic
expression, as defined by Seki in the exhibition catalogue, as well as
in the show's organization, were collage, the ultra realistic
copying in oil paint of the surface textures of objects, and cartoonlike
caricature with humanized but comically distorted animal characters. In
paintings such as Letters, 1936, and Work, 1940, the picture plane is
divided into quasi-Cubist geometrical forms, or an array of such forms,
to create a multilayered structure into which Katsura could fold actual
or copied fragments of everyday objects and natural images, ranging from
flower petals, tree bark, fungi, and lace to the grid-patterned fabric
of traditional women's farming garb. Incorporating the tactile
surfaces of the external world into her densely knit fabric of image and
texture, Katsura synthesized her perceptions and indicated the
interconnectedness of natural and human realms as well as the continuity
of the present consciousness with ancient layers of memory. The
satirical paintings, combining the sharp wit of prewar urban cartoons
with the violent distortion and compositional abstractions of modernist
painting, gained a strident critical force--for instance in Resistance,
1952, or Man and Fish, 1954, in which the half-humorous, half-grotesque
figures cry out against the dehumanization and social disorder betokened
by mass society, nuclear weapons, and the Cold War. This caricatural
style embodied Katsura's answer to the 1946 call by the avant-garde
art critic Kiyoteru Hanada for artists to create intensely disruptive
works to confront, with equal force, the violent reality of that period
of cultural transition.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Katsura's subsequent stylistic changes--including her
large-scale, highly tactile abstract paintings of the 1960s; a return to
cartoonlike social satire in the '70s, in works showing people as
subhuman creatures drowning in layers of information and commodities
made using collage and meticulous representations of accumulated
newspaper and banknote fragments; her late-'70s wooden panels
overlaid with fragments of discarded cork to present an Arte
Povera--like alternative to painting; and the soft sculpture of the
1980s, made of red silk fabric traditionally used for the inside of
women's kimonos--all reflect the artist's shifting relations
with contemporary society, from conscious distancing to sober but
humorous critique, and finally to the reconsideration of history from an
anonymous woman's viewpoint. In this astonishing thematic range,
radical formal inventiveness, and pointed social critique, all of which
continue the suppressed possibilities of the prewar formal experiments
in the vastly different postwar context, Katsura's oeuvre reveals
an avant-garde spirit as strong--and relevant--as ever.