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Yoshitomo Nara

Introduction

Yoshitomo Nara (b. Japan, 1959) is among the most beloved Japanese artists of his generation, known for his portraits of vaguely ominous-looking characters who have penetrating gazes and occasionally wield knives or cigarettes, as well as heads and figures that float in dreamy landscapes. Nara’s oeuvre reflects the artist’s raw encounters with his inner self, taking inspiration from a wide range of resources—memories of his childhood, music, literature, studying and living in Germany (1988–2000), exploring his roots in Asia and Sakhalin, and modern art from Europe and Japan. Spanning from 1984 to 2020, Yoshitomo Nara views the artist’s work through the lens of his longtime passion: music. Music’s ability to convey emotional depth and atmospheric power finds a parallel in Nara’s artworks, which combine visuality, emotion, and often text, and have evolved dramatically over the last three decades, from his earliest allegorical paintings from 1987 to his more recent portraits. Nara’s paintings from the 1990s and 2000s, in particular, are marked by layered brushwork and a kaleidoscopic palette.

They stand in contrast to both the rougher DIY aesthetic of his earlier works on paper and the smooth, highly polished fiber-reinforced plastic used in his early sculpture Recently, he has shifted to a much more contemplative mode, making ceramics and sculptures in cast bronze whose mottled surfaces evoke the artist’s hand. Expressing a kinship with the rawness of folk music, Nara has said, “If viewers are able to see beyond the impulsive and surface-level impact of [my] work, and sense a moving quietude and depth, then, no doubt, these effects are influenced by such music.” This exhibition aims to reset some of the dominant perceptions of Nara’s work by shifting the focus toward the self-critical introspection and individuality that have become more prevalent in the quiet, meditative work he has made in the last decade, particularly since the great 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.

This exhibition is organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

 

Principal sponsorship is provided by
 

United Airlines

 

Major support is provided by Mr. Zoltan and Mrs. Tamara Varga, London; Andrew Xue, Singapore; Blum & Poe; and Pace Gallery.

 

Generous support is provided by Rochelle and Irving Azoff, Andre Sakhai, Sally and Ralph Tawil, and

Japan Foundation

 

This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.

 

All exhibitions at LACMA are underwritten by the LACMA Exhibition Fund. Major annual support is provided by Kitzia and Richard Goodman and Meredith and David Kaplan, with generous annual funding from Terry and Lionel Bell, Kevin J. Chen, Louise and Brad Edgerton, Edgerton Foundation, Emily and Teddy Greenspan, Marilyn B. and Calvin B. Gross, Mary and Daniel James, David Lloyd and Kimberly Steward, Kelsey Lee Offield, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony and Lee Shaw, Lenore and Richard Wayne, Marietta Wu and Thomas Yamamoto, and The Kenneth T. and Eileen L. Norris Foundation.

Exhibition Soundtrack

For this playlist, created to accompany Nara’s work My Drawing Room (2008), the artist selected songs that reflect his love of 1960s and ʼ70s singer-songwriters, who he began listening to as an adolescent and whose work greatly influenced his own.

Listen

Yoshitomo Nara

Early Years

Nara was born in the city of Hirosaki in Aomori Prefecture in the northernmost region of mainland Japan, near an area once occupied by the 8th Division of the Imperial Japanese Army; his elementary and junior high schools were former army barracks. A latchkey kid, he often played alone while his parents worked, with an abandoned ammunition depot serving as one of his first “playgrounds.” Nara had the sensation that the “entire area was filled with debris and ghosts.” During World War II, the U.S. Allied occupation had turned parts of the imperial army site into its Misawa Air Base, which throughout Nara’s childhood supported American war efforts in Vietnam.

One of the artist’s earliest, most visceral memories is tuning in to the midnight Far East Network (FEN) radio broadcast that served the base. Living among past and current symbols of warfare, Nara listened to news of the Vietnam War broadcast in Japanese and to American rock and folk. As the political landscape of the world changed with the Vietnam War, and as Japanese protests against the U.S.-Japan Security Treaty increased, Nara was captivated by folk songs of the civil rights era and antiwar rock music, and he delved deeper into folk through Appalachian music and its various roots in African and British ballads. The footage of the war that Nara saw on TV and in newspapers was burned deep into his mind as he listened to these songs, and he felt he was experiencing the war in real time. Nara developed a strong ethical conviction to always pursue what felt “real” based on his lived experience.

Image: In Gallery Yoshitomo Nara

Nara's Record Collection

Installation photograph, Yoshitomo Nara, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2021, art © Yoshitomo Nara, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

Music has been a passion for Nara since he began to listen to folk songs at age nine. The artist’s vast record collection, including folk, rock, blues, soul, and punk albums, is a testament to his great admiration for album cover art; as he has said, “Album covers were the first things that spoke to me as works of visual art. For me, having been brought up in a rural area where there were no museums, this was my very first art experience.” Nara’s love of music provided him with an unorthodox art education: the images on record covers not only became signifiers for music but also introduced him to a vast array of artistic genres, with covers and their corresponding music merging in his subconscious. For the young Nara, growing up in Japan in the shadows of war and economic recovery, the records and their covers served as sources of escape and, eventually, as a valuable form of self-empowerment rooted in the countercultural revolution of the 1960s. They allowed him to deal with the complexities of living with the remnants of Japan’s imperial past and in close proximity to signs of ongoing conflict.

Untitled drawing (2003)
Yoshitomo Nara, Untitled, 2003, Graphite on paper, 16 1⁄2 × 23 5⁄8 in. (42 × 60 cm), Collection of the artist, © Yoshitomo Nara 2003, photo by Heather Rasmussen, courtesy of Pace Gallery and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo
 

Yoshitomo Nara

Pray, 1991

Pray, 1991

Yoshitomo Nara, Pray, 1991, Acrylic on paper mache and canvas collage, Height: 26 3/4 in., Collection of the artist,  © Yoshitomo Nara 1991, Image courtesy of  SBI Art Auction Co., Ltd.

In one of his many backpacking trips to Europe in the early 1980s, Nara frequented museums with art historical masterpieces but was also struck by early devotional sculptures, such as the twelfth-century Mother and Child from the Church of Santa Maria de Covet at Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya in Barcelona. Drawn to the Romanesque style in which accentuated facial features reflect strong devotion, he saw an affinity with Buddhist sculptures, where strength of devotion is proportional to the amount of stylistic deformation and presence. These traditions would have a direct impact on the figuration in some of Nara’s first sculptures and paintings, characterized by disproportionately small arms and rounded or tapered feet as in Pray (1991).

People on the Cloud, 1989

People on the Cloud, 1989

Yoshitomo Nara, People on the Cloud, 1989, Acrylic on canvas, 39⅜ × 39⅜ in. (100 × 100 cm), Private Collection, Japan, © Yoshitomo Nara 1989, photo by Norihiro Ueno, courtesy of the artist

In Nara’s earliest works made at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, allegories of good and evil collapse, and innocence becomes one with destruction itself. Compositions are divided in half or in quadrants, and figures with elongated heads wear halos, with their hands transforming into flames or knives. In People on the Cloud, a horizon line splits the composition—animals, people, and hybrid figures crawl along the outer edges of the frame. Nara masterfully situates the figures between symbolic and physical planes of the piece. Each figure is surrounded by anxiety and sadness, with gazes that verge on imminent violence.

Yoshitomo Nara

Nara in Europe

Nara traveled to Europe in 1987 to see Documenta 8 in Kassel, Germany, and witnessed a heightened sense of individuality while visiting a friend at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie. Determined to study there, he was accepted the following year, and lived in Germany until 2000. Nara's paintings at the Düsseldorf Kunstakademie, like Make the Road, Follow the Road (1990), initially took on allegorical themes, with figures coexisting in different moments in time, condensing memories and displacing events from everyday life. By the mid-1990s, Nara shifted his focus to a single, ominous figure often depicted with a large head and tapered feet, floating in empty atmospheres (as seen in this gallery). Sharpening the outline of the body in subdued pastels, Nara began intensifying the figure by experimenting with sideways gazes and slightly off-center placement, bringing it into a bolder and fuller focus against monochromatic backgrounds. “These works were born not from confronting the other, but from confronting my own self,” the artist has said.

Make the Road,  Follow the Road, 1990

Make the Road, Follow the Road, 1990

Yoshitomo Nara, Make the Road, Follow the Road, 1990, Acrylic on canvas,39 3/8 × 39 3/8 in. (100 × 100 cm), Collection of Aomori Museum of Art, Aomori, Japan,  © Yoshitomo Nara 1990, photo courtesy Aomori Museum of Art

A recurring theme in Nara’s early practice is confrontations with violence. An allegory for one’s ill-fated future, in this painting, a girl with a knife in one hand and a flame ball in the other walks toward a cat as if giving it the option to choose between the two. Red smoke inscribed with “Nothing ever happens, nothing” billows from a ball of fire in the girl’s hand, and the phrase “The needle returns the first of the song and we will sing like before” is scribbled on a blackboard invoking the lyrics of Scottish rock band Del Amitri’s 1989 “Nothing Ever Happens.”

In the Deepest Puddle II, 1995

In the Deepest Puddle II, 1995

Yoshitomo Nara, In the Deepest Puddle II, 1995, Acrylic on cotton mounted on canvas, 47 1/4 × 43 5/16 in. (120 × 110 cm), Takahashi Ryutaro Collection,  © Yoshitomo Nara 1995, photo by Keizo Kioku, courtesy of the artist
 

This painting depicts a girl with her enlarged head wrapped in bandages and her legs submerged under the surface of rippling water that echoes the bandages and haunting, bean-like eyes. The work was featured in his first major gallery exhibition in Tokyo in 1995 and appeared on the cover of Nara’s first book of paintings in 1997. It features a motif that recurs in many of Nara’s paintings and sculptures, inspired by the cover of folk singer John Hiatt’s album Overcoats (1975), which shows the singer half-submerged in water wearing his overcoat.

Fountain of Life, 2001/2014

Fountain of Life, 2001/2014

Yoshitomo Nara, Fountain of Life, 2001/2014, Fiber-reinforced plastic, lacquer, urethane, motor, and water, Edition of 3, artist proof 1/2, 68⅞ × 70⅞ × 70⅞ in. (175 × 180 × 180 cm), Collection of Alaia Chen, © Yoshitomo Nara 2014, photo by Mie Morimoto, courtesy of the artist

Presented at Nara’s first major survey exhibition, I DON’T MIND, IF YOU FORGET ME., at the Yokohama Museum of Art in 2001, Fountain of Life is a motorized sculptural installation of heads with closed eyelids that tower over one another inside an enormous teacup with water that streams down the figures’ cheeks, forming a fountain of tears. The melancholy of this work is palpable, and the figures’ clean profiles evoke the abstract richly outlined paintings of Japanese abstract painter, Morikazu Kumagai, whom Nara has long admired.

Yoshitomo Nara

No Nukes, 1998

No Nukes, 1998

Yoshitomo Nara, No Nukes, 1998, Acrylic and colored pencil on paper, 14⅛ × 8⅞ in. (36 × 22.5 cm), Collection of Masayuki Nagase, © Yoshitomo Nara 1998, photo by Norihiro Ueno, courtesy of the artist

An early representation of Nara’s strong stance against nuclear weapons, No Nukes is now synonymous with the antinuclear protest movement. Painted over a promotional poster for bossa nova musician Vinicius Cantuária’s Amor Brasileiro (1998) among other printed ephemera, in July 2012, it became a powerful symbol when the artist allowed protesters to download a high-resolution image of the work to use as picket signs during one of Japan’s largest antinuclear protests. Dubbed “No Nukes Girl,” as many as one hundred thousand people gathered to rail against the government’s decision to restart two nuclear reactors in Fukui prefecture, many with this image in hand.

Yoshitomo Nara

My Drawing Room, 2008

My Drawing Room, 2008

Yoshitomo Nara, My Drawing Room, 2008, Mixed media, 118 11/16 × 147 5/8 × 149 5/8 in. (301.5 × 375 × 380 cm), Collection of the artist, © Yoshitomo Nara 2008, photo by Mie Morimoto, courtesy of the artist

Nara began creating portable installations of his paintings, drawings, and sculptures, which ranged from the three-part installation S.M.L. (2003) to the epic twenty-six-installation exhibition A to Z (2006), in 2003. These domestic environments culminated in My Drawing Room, a painted wooden architectural structure that recreates Nara’s studio space. A hand-painted billboard with the words “Place Like Home” hangs on the exterior, and the inside features piles of drawings on the floor and a desk with figurines, mix CDs that Nara curated, vernacular paintings, drawings, ephemera, and collectibles from vintage Americana shops that the artist has accumulated over the years.

Nara selected the music playing here to complement this installation. The songs reflect his love of 1960s and ʼ70s singer- songwriters, who he began listening to as an adolescent and whose work greatly influenced his own.

Missing in Action – Girl Meets Boy, 2005

Missing in Action – Girl Meets Boy, 2005

Yoshitomo Nara, Missing in Action—Girl Meets Boy—, 2005, Acrylic, colored pencil, and watercolor on paper, 59 × 54 in. (150 × 137 cm), Collection of Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, © Yoshitomo Nara 2005, photo by Yoshitaka Uchida, courtesy of the artist
 

 

Starting in 2005, Nara’s singular portraits began to take a dramatic turn, each projecting a complex expression that combines sadness, anger, and serenity. In Missing in Action – Girl Meets Boy, fire from an atomic bomb explosion is reflected in one of the eyes of the figure, representing a memory of Hiroshima, where this work is housed. The political valence of this work on paper connects the fading memory of the previous generation who experienced the war with the younger generation of Japanese youth who can only experience this decisive moment indirectly.

This work will be on view March-June 2021.

Yoshitomo Nara

Shallow Puddles, 2006

Shallow Puddles, 2006

Yoshitomo Nara, Shallow Puddles, 2006, Acrylic on cotton mounted on FRP, 37 3/8 × 37 3/8 × 5 7/8 in. (95 × 95 × 15 cm),  © Yoshitomo Nara 2006, photo by Keizo Kioku, courtesy of the artist

Nara uses his signature “bandage” technique, which he began in the mid-1990s, where he builds the surface up with strips of cotton to create a textured background, which is mounted on FRP board. A girl with pointy bangs and green eyes is submerged so far underwater that only her eyes, nose, and forehead are visible. The rounded structure of the dish-shaped canvas adds to the illusion of depth—as if one is witnessing the drowning of a figure who seems to be in a simultaneous condition of anger and passivity.

Yoshitomo Nara

Miss Spring, 2012

Miss Spring, 2012

Yoshitomo Nara, Miss Spring, 2012, Acrylic on canvas, 89⅜ × 71⅝ in. (227 × 182 cm), Collection of the Yokohama Museum of Art, © Yoshitomo Nara 2012, photo by Keizo Kioku, courtesy of the artist

 

While confronting the 2011 nuclear disaster, Nara made Miss Spring (2012), a portrait of a wide-eyed girl with a high forehead who stands against a cherry-blossom pink background and stares straight at the viewer, with prism-like teardrops glistening in her eyes. A symbol of hope, this portrait served as the cover image for Ryūichi Sakamoto’s No Nukes 2012: Guidebook for Our Future. Miss Spring was used as a powerful backdrop banner by the protest organizers during the demonstrations.

Yoshitomo Nara

Miss Margaret, 2016

Miss Margaret, 2016

Yoshitomo Nara, Miss Margaret, 2016, Acrylic on canvas, 76 3/8 × 63 3/4 in. (194 × 162 cm), The Rachofsky Collection, © Yoshitomo Nara 2016, photo by Keizo Kioku, courtesy of the artist

In 2005 Nara moved into a beautiful studio that overlooks the green pastures in Nasushiobara, Tochigi Prefecture, where he would eventually open N’s YARD, a space that houses his artwork and collection. The paintings he began making in this period are layered in a vast array of palettes that create a kaleidoscopic effect, with many works featuring different colored eyes. The backgrounds are often dark and thickly layered, with iridescent colors that float in and out of sight, evoking the existential effects of Mark Rothko’s soft, saturated forms. The works depict single figures and resemble portrait paintings by modern European artists such as Amedeo Modigliani and Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita, yet their singularity and directness—seen especially in recent works Can't Wait till the Night Comes (2012) and Miss Margaret (2016)—project a complex expression that combines sadness, anger, and serenity, which Nara achieves by reworking and repainting the faces multiple times.

Light Haze Days/Study, 2020

Light Haze Days/Study, 2020

Yoshitomo Nara, Light Haze Days / Study, 2020, Collection of the artist, Courtesy of the artist and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo, © Yoshitomo Nara 2020, photo by Keizo Kioku

Nara produced this painting in June 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic. The artist considers this work a “study” in search of a new artistic stylistic direction. The patchwork of color on the hair and clothes, as well the peach hue beneath the surface of the skin, reflect an unfinished quality akin to French modernist landscape painting. The blended colors that emanate from underneath her glassy eyes are also a departure from the linear U-shaped marks in the eyes that reflect fire and other objects in previous paintings. The expression exudes a pensive warmth that differs from the distant, introspective gaze of his previous portraits, signaling an emotional shift that is affected by the pandemic, which impacted the installation of this retrospective.

Yoshitomo Nara

Catalogue Available: Yoshitomo Nara

Catalogue Available

Follow the trajectory of Yoshitomo Nara, one of the most prominent contemporary artists, whose work has grown in complexity and nuance over the past three decades. Hardcover, 224 pages

Catalogue and other items available at the LACMA Store

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Yoshitomo Nara

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