Page 133 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 133

PROPERTY FROM RONALD AND MARIA ANDERSON COLLECTION
 44
 SHINODA TOKO (1913-2021)
 Innovation

 Signed To and Shinoda
 Sumi-ink, gouache and platinum leaf on canvas, framed
 34√ x 23¬ in. (88.6 x 60 cm.)
 $20,000-30,000


 Shinoda Toko is a leading figure in Japanese Abstract art, who is
 famous for her blend of traditional calligraphy and abstract art.
 Shinoda was encouraged to study calligraphy in her younger days,
 as such profession was one of the few kinds that Japanese women
 would be respected at the time. However, her rebellious mind
 distracted her from going onto the conventional path – she sought
 for a nontraditional yet tangible expression to demonstrate her
 inner self. Nonetheless, the traditional training left strong impact in
 her artistic language. Shinoda is fascinated with Sumi (India ink),
 and she masters in employing degrees of blackness. Yohaku (empty
 space) is an Asian rooted idea, which she uses to achieve spatial
 balance and demonstrates the tension between existing elements.
 She employs traditional techniques and transforms them into
 modern abstractionism language.

 The result of her Eastern-Western merge was successful. Shinoda
 was once represented by the legendary dealer Betty Parsons when
 she landed in New York in 1956. The universal artistic language
 Shinoda creates brought her enormous commercial traffic, as well
 as great academic attention. Toko Shinoda exhibited at various
 renowned institutions, such as Guggenheim Museum, Art Institute
 of Chicago, Singapore Art Museum and The Museum of Modern
 Art in New York.

 篠田桃紅 (1913-2021) INNOVATION
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