Shozo Shimamoto (Japanese, 1928-2013)
Work
Oil and glue on canvas
41 x 32 cm. (16 1/8 x 12 5/8 in.)
Executed in 1951
About the lot
Estimate:
HK$900,000–1,100,000
To be offered in:
Asian 20th Century Art (Day Sale), 29 May
Executed in 1951, Shozo Shimamoto’s Work is one of the radical experiments from his ‘Holes’ series, which began in 1950. Exceptionally rare, Work precedes the establishment of the avant-garde Gutai group that Shimamoto co-founded in 1954.
Always a pioneer, Shimamoto abandoned the norms of his predecessors and created his own artistic rubric, tapping into a previously unexplored aesthetic.
Inspired by the accidental rips and tears in the glued newspapers he used instead of canvas during post-war austerity, Shimamoto employed irregular tears and rips in the series to create a complex play of light and shadow across the surface of the canvas. In Work, the artist has created a visual passageway; a hole through which one can traverse the wall. Through Shimamoto’s destruction of the two-dimensional surface, Work takes on sculptural qualities – its irregular lines and rough texture highlighting the juxtaposition between destruction and beauty, echoing the wabi-sabi aesthetic of traditional Japanese culture.
Work is a significant milestone in Shimamoto’s artistic development, and forms part of the same 1954 collection shown at the Tate Modern, London. From ‘Work’, Shimamoto discovered the beauty within chaos and violence, and further extended this concept in his groundbreaking 1956 Bottle Crash performance piece.