Kimiyo Mishima: Paintings
Press:
KCRW, June 14, 2018
Nonaka-Hill is pleased to present the first Los Angeles solo exhibition of paintings by Kimiyo Mishima, a contemporary Japanese artist.
Born in Osaka in 1932, Mishima was a child during WWII, and started painting in her teens as the war ended. Mishima recalls emerging from an air raid shelter to find her city flattened by American bombs, an event that undoubtedly impressed a lasting image of material and information chaos into the young artist’s mind. Throughout her ongoing artistic career, which is now past 65 years of activity, Kimiyo Mishima has consistently expressed her “fear and anxiety of drowning in information” through paintings, photographs, ceramics, sculpture and large-scale installations. In 1952, Mishima joined Atelier Montagne Youga Kenkyusho, led by artist Shigeji Mishima, whom she later married. Shigeji Mishima had been a student of Jiro Yoshihara, leader of Gutai Art Association, and the young couple mixed in this dynamic artistic milieu, where overseas art movements such as Art Informel and Abstract Expressionism were in discussion. In 1954, Mishima joined the Independent Art Association (Dokuritsu Bijutsu Kyokai), and by 1957 she abandoned figurative painting for abstraction, incorporating mixed media collage on top of painted canvas. Mishima’s use of newspaper and magazine imagery, often in repetition, was contemporaneous with emerging international phenomena of Pop Art and Capitalist Realism. Mishima produced such paintings through the 1960s, exhibiting with Dokuritsu where she received awards, sometimes alongside Jiro Takamatsu. The six paintings on view are from this period. The exhibition’s earliest work is from 1962, when the artist was 30 years old, and is titled “Recollection II”. On this panel, mosquito net shrouds torn magazine images of the American flag, fragments of architecture, beautiful women, lipsticks (which look like bullets). Four paintings in the exhibition date from 1965-66, years notable for the rapid acceleration of the Japanese economy within the period known as “The Japanese Economic Miracle”, 1945-1991. These works reflect the consumer confidence of the moment, and an increased appetite for imported entertainment, information, and luxury goods. In these paintings, foreign language words are prominent, while on closer inspection Katakana (Japanese alphabet for foreign words) reveals the paintings to be from Japan. These images, sourced from the same superabundance of printed materials that the artist fears being subsumed by, churn and tumble in the active dark areas of paint, contrasting with expanses of white paint, which could be described as voids.
“Work 66-7A”, also from 1966, contains multiple images of human throat palate, gateway of consumption and communication. The painting’s pastel colored, spray-painted cloud-like shapes and geometric forms are peppered with stenciled shipping crate markings indicating export of “Made in Japan” products. In 1971, Mishima developed a method of silk-screen printing the attractive graphics of quick-consumables onto ceramic, and began an ongoing, signature practice of transforming spent, crumpled, and crushed “single use” items such as beverage cans, newspapers and corrugated boxes into Realist sculpture renderings of “Breakable Printed Materials”. In 1974, such works by Mishima were exhibited at legendary Minami Gallery in Tokyo, known for shows of leading Japanese artists of the time, and foreign artists such as J. Johns, L. Nevelson, C. Oldenburg, Christo, and others. In the decades since, Mishima, who speaks of a fear of mountains of garbage and overwhelming information, has continued to create fragile sculptural “fossils’ of these subjects, from actual size to monumental, with prescient fear and coequal wit.
Kimiyo Mishima, born 1932, Juso, Osaka, Japan. She lives and works in Osaka and Gifu, Japan. Installation scaled sculptural works by Kimiyo Mishima are on permanent display at Art Factory Jonanjima, Tokyo and at Benesse Art Site, Naoshima, Japan. Her work is included in museum collections numerous museums in Japan, including National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Contemporary Art, in American museums including Art Institute of Chicago, Everson Museum of Arts, Syracuse, NY, Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art, Gainesville, FL, Minneapolis Museum of Art, MN, Smith College, Northampton, MA, and museum worldwide including British Museum, London, Musée Cernoschi, Paris, Musée Ariana, Geneva, ARTER | Vebi Koç Foundation, Istanbul, M+ Museum, Hong Kong, and The Korean Culture & Arts Foundation in Seoul, amongst others. In 1986, Mishima received a Rockefeller Scholarship AAC through which she lived and worked in New York for a year. “The modern age is overflowing with information. Obviously we are afraid and apprehensive of the nonstop information that comes before our eyes daily, but we harbor a deeper fear of being inundated in the flood of information… In my work, I hope that will be a dry humor that includes the fear and apprehension of modern times.” Kimiyo Mishima, from “Printed Matter that Became Ceramic Art, Kimiyo Mishima, Contemporary Japanese Ceramic Art, Vol. 16, “Exploring New Form”, Kodansha, 1985
- Kimiyo MishimaRecollection II, 1962Magazine, oil on canvas.60-1/4 x 36 inches
153 x 91.5 cm - Kimiyo MishimaTransfiguration II, 1966Magazine, oil on canvas.51-3/8 x 63-3/4 inches
130.5 x 162 cm - Kimiyo MishimaWork 65-O, 1965Magazine, oil on canvas.63-3/4 x 36-1/4 inches
162 x 92 cm - Kimiyo MishimaWork 66-7A, 1966Magazine, oil on canvas.63-3/4 x 51-9/16 inches
162 x 131 cm - Kimiyo MishimaErosion 1, 1966Magazine, oil on canvas, framed.63-3/4 x 51-3/8 inches
162 x 130.5 cm - Kimiyo MishimaWork 66-W, 1966Magazine, oil on canvas.51-3/8 x 63-3/4 inches
130.5 x 162 cm - Kimiyo MishimaWork 17-PC2, 2017Printed and painted ceramic.6-1/ x 3-3/4 x 2-3/4 inches
15.5 x 9.5 x 7 cm - Kimiyo MishimaWork 17-CC2, 2017Printed & painted ceramic.14.5 x 7 x 7.5 cm
Related artist
Artist Exhibited:
Ulala Imai
Kazuo Kadonaga
Kentaro Kawabata
Zenzaburo Kojima
Kisho Kurokawa
Tadaaki Kuwayama
Toshio Matsumoto
Keita Matsunaga
Yutaka Matsuzawa
Kimiyo Mishima
Kunié Sugiura
Takuro Tamayama
Tiger Tateishi
Sofu Teshigahara
Shomei Tomatsu
Wataru Tominaga
Hosai Matsubayashi XVI
Kansuke Yamamoto
Masaomi Yasunaga
Exhibitions:
-2025-
-2024-
KYOKO IDETSU: What can an ideology do for me?
KENTARO KAWABATA / BRUCE NAUMAN
SAORI (MADOKORO) AKUTAGAWA: CENTENARIA
Keita Matsunaga : Accumulation Flow
-2023-
NONAKA-HILL ♥ TATAMI ANTIQUES: A holiday sale of unique objects from Japan
TAKASHI HOMMA : REVOLUTION No.9 / Camera Obscura Studies
TATSUMI HIJIKATA THE LAST BUTOH: Photographs by Yasuo Kuroda
Kiyomizu Rokubey VIII: CERAMIC SIGHT
Masaomi Yasunaga: 石拾いからの発見 / discoveries from picking up stones
SHUZO AZUCHI GULLIVER ‘Synogenesis’
Koichi Enomoto: Against the day
Tatsuo Ikeda / Michael E. Smith
Hiroshi Sugito: the garden with Zenzaburo Kojima
Zenzaburo Kojima: This very green
Tomohisa Obana: To see the rainbow at night, I must make it myself
Daisuke Fukunaga: Beautiful Work
- 2021 -
Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love
Takashi Homma: mushrooms from the forest
– 2020 –
Hosai Matsubayashi XVI & Trevor Shimizu
Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga
– 2019 –
A show about an architectural monograph
Yutaka Matsuzawa
Yutaka Matsuzawa through the lens of Mitsutoshi Hanaga
Takuro Tamayama & Tiger Tateishi
Kunié Sugiura
Masaomi Yasunaga
Miho Dohi
Wataru Tominaga
Naotaka Hiro
Parergon: Japanese Art of the 1980s and 1990s
Tadaaki Kuwayama
– 2018 –
Toshio Matsumoto
Kentaro Kawabata
Kansuke Yamamoto
Kazuo Kadonaga: Wood / Paper / Bamboo / Glass
Press:
-2025-
Artillery Magazine, Sawako Goda
-2024-
Artsy, Nonaka-Hill
Richesse, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto
Bijutsutecho, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto
The Art Newspaper, Nonaka-Hill Kyoto
Meer, Kyoko Idetsu
Bijyutsutecho, Masaomi Yasunaga
Switch, Masaomi Yasunaga
ARTnews JAPAN, Masaomi Yasunaga
Richesse, Masaomi Yasunaga
Art Basel, Daisuke Fukunaga, Imai Ulala
Art Basel, Kazuo Kadonaga, Sofu Teshigahara
-2023-
ADF webmagazine, Yasuo Kuroda, Tatsumi Hijikata
e-flux, Sanya Kantarofsky, Yasuo Kuroda
Los Angeles Times, Kenzi Shiokava
Artillery, Masaomi Yasunaga
Contemporary Art Daily Shuzo Azuchi Gulliver
- 2022 -
Contemporary Art Daily, Tomohisa Obana
ARTE FUSE, Daisuke Fukunaga
Contemporary Art Daily, Daisuke Fukunaga
Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Daisuke Fukunaga
What's on Los Angeles, Daisuke Fukunaga
Hyperallergic, Daisuke Fukunaga
Artillery, Kentaro Kawabata
Larchmont Buzz, entaro Kawabata
- 2021 -
Art Viewer, Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love
Hyperallergic, Natsuyasumi: In the Beginning Was Love
Art Viewer, Takashi Homma
Hyperallergic, Busy Work at Home
Art Viewer, Busy Work at Home
Hyperallergic, Ulala Imai
Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Ulala Imai
Contemporary Art Daily, Ulala Imai
artillery, Ulala Imai
Special Ops, Ulala Imai
Art Viewer, Ulala Imai
artillery, Matsubayashi & Trevor Shimizu
– 2020 –
Ceramic Now, Sterling Ryby and Masaomi Yasunaga
Hypebeast, Sterling Ryby and Masaomi Yasunaga
Art Viewer, Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga
Air Mail, Sterling Ruby and Masaomi Yasunaga
Los Angeles Times, Kaz Oshiro
ArtnowLA, Kaz Oshiro
What's on Los Angeles, Kaz Oshiro
KCRW, Kaz Oshiro
Tique, Kaz Oshiro
Contemporary Art Daily, Kaz Oshiro
Art Viewer, Kaz Oshiro
Contemporary Art Daily, Sofu Teshigahara
Art Viewer, Sofu Teshigahara
KCRW, Sofu Tsshigahara
Hyperallergic, Nonaka-Hill
Los Angeles Times, Keita Matsunaga
– 2019 –
Los Angeles Times, Tatsumi Hijikata
Art Viewer, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe
Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe
ArtAsiaPacific, Yutaka Matsuzawa
Los Angeles Times, Tatsumi Hijikata
AUTRE, Tatsumi Hijikata, Eikoh Hosoe
Los Angeles Times, Nonaka-Hill
ARTFORUM, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi
Art Viewer, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi
KCRW, Nonaka-Hill
LA WEEKLY, Nonaka-Hill
AUTRE, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi
ArtsuZe, Takuro Tamayama, Tiger Tateishi
ARTFORUM, Review: Tadaaki Kuwayama, Rakuko Naito
Art Viewer, Masaomi Yasunaga, Kunié Sugiura
Los Angeles Times, Masaomi Yasunaga
KQED, Tadaaki Kuwayama, Rakuko Naito
Contemporary Art Daily, Naotaka Hiro, Wataru Tominaga, Miho Dohi
Los Angeles Times, Miho Dohi
Los Angeles Review of Books, Miho Dohi
Bijutsu Techo, Naotaka Hiro, Wataru Tominaga, Miho Dohi
Art Viewer, Miho Dohi
Art & Object, Parergon
COOL HUNTING, Felix Art Fair
Art Viewer, Tadaaki Kuwayama
artnet news, Nonaka-Hill
Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles (Carla), Tadaaki Kuwayama
– 2018 –
Art Viewer, Kentaro Kawabata
Contemporary Art Daily, Kazuo kadonaga
Los Angeles Times, Kazuo Kadonaga
ARTFORUM, Kazuo Kadonaga
Contemporary Art Daily, Shomei Tomatsu
KCRW, Kimiyo Mishima, Shomei Tomatsu
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