Kenzo Okada

Kenzo Okada (岡田 謙三 "Okada Kenzō" September 28, 1902 – July 25, 1982) was a Japanese-born American painter and the first Japanese-American performer to feat in the abstract expressionist style and receive international acclaim.

According to Michelle Stuart, "when Okada came to the United States he was already a become old painter, well considered in his native Japan. To American taking away Okada brought civilized restraint, an elegance of device and an odd gift for poetic transmutation of natural forms."

Kenzo Okada was born September 28, 1902 in Yokohama, Japan. His father, a wealthy industrialist, did not withhold his son's desire to be an artist. When his father died, Okada entered the department of Western painting at Tokyo School of Fine Arts, called today Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music, but in 1924 left for France where he studied following fellow Japanese expatriate Tsugouharu Foujita, executing paintings of urban subjects. In 1927, he exhibited accomplish in the Salon d'Automne. In the similar year, he returned to Japan and within a year he had his first one-person do its stuff at the Mitsukoshi Department Store in Tokyo. His attainment continued next a prize in 1936 from the Japanese contemporary artist group Nikakai Group, of which he went on to become a lifetime member. He taught at the School of Fine Arts, Nihon University from 1940 to 1944, but was evacuated to Mori village in the Miyagi Prefecture, later returning to Tokyo to tutor at the Musashino Art University.

A realist painter in Japan, in 1950 he moved to New York City, where he produced abstract paintings. Undoubtedly stimulated by abstract expressionism, these paintings nevertheless display a mighty Japanese sensibility and feeling for form. In 1953, he began to exhibit his abstract expressionist paintings gone the Betty Parsons Gallery in New York City, and through Parsons, gained entry to the inner circle of Abstract Expressionism. His paintings from the 1950s and 1960s spread subtle changes in the plants through the use of imagery build up with delicate, sensitive color tonalities, floating within the compositional space. Turn from 1962, in the accretion of the Honolulu Museum of Art, and Hagoromo from 1966, in the Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collection, are examples of the artist's tonal abstractions.

During the 1970s he painted numerous works that used as a narrowing of departure the reinterpretation of the decorative effects of received Japanese painting.

Okada evokes the aura of landscape by using earth colors, abstract patterns hinting at rocks and flowers, and an overall haziness that makes his scenes see submerged in water. Bringing an Asian reaction to the New York School of abstraction, Okada distills the essence of flora and fauna into his painting, making it seem elemental and appropriately sublime. Okada became friends with Mark Rothko and many other abstract expressionists, especially the to the fore color field painters. His twinge and personal style of abstract expressionism, with his Asian roots, relates directly to both color showground painting and lyrical abstraction.

Okada died in Tokyo July 24, 1982.

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