YOSHITOMO NARA (JAPAN, B. 1959)
PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN COLLECTION
YOSHITOMO NARA (JAPAN, B. 1959)

QUIET, QUIET

Details
YOSHITOMO NARA (JAPAN, B. 1959)
QUIET, QUIET
fiberglass, resin, lacquer and urethane sculpture
243.8 x 94 x 94 cm. (96 x 37 x 37 in.)
Executed in 1999
Provenance
Blum & Poe, Santa Monica, USA
Eugenio Lopez, Mexico City, Mexico
La Colleccion Jumex, Mexico City, Mexico
Maloney Fine Art Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2003
Private Collection, USA
Literature
Institute fur moderne Kunst Nurnberg in collaboration with Michael Zink Gallery, and Kodokawa Shoten Publishing Co. Ltd., Lullaby
Supermarket, Munich, Germany, and Tokyo, Japan, 2002 (second Ed.) (illustrated, p. 187).
Exhibited
Santa Monica, USA, Blum & Poe, Yoshitomo Nara, March 16 – April 3, 1999.
Santa Monica, USA, Santa Monica Museum of Art, Lullaby Supermarket, March 24 – May 20, 2000.
Mexico City, Mexico, Museo Ex Teresa Arte Actual, La Colleccion Jumex, February 20 – March 15, 2001.
Mexico City, Mexico, La Colleccion Jumex, Leisure Theory, January 31 – October 15, 2002.

Brought to you by

Annie Lee
Annie Lee

Lot Essay

One of the most remarkable features of Yoshitomo Nara’s artistic output is its ability to cross boundaries. Not being limited by media, his works can be seen on canvas, panel, or paper, sometimes with watercolour or pencil. Sculptural works are often made in ceramics and fibreglass. His creative spirit demonstrates that there should not be a distinction between high and low art. Nara absorbs aesthetic influences from a myriad of sources — Ukiyo-e, children’s book, Western modernist art, and commercial illustrations. All the different strengths of these disciplines are transformed into an idiosyncratic stye that reflects the spirit of contemporary Japan.

Children and dogs with closed eyes are two of the most remarkable subjects in Yoshitomo Nara’s sculptural output. Tranquil in countenance, they look like they are deep in slumber, contemplation, or prayer. Standing two meters tall, Quiet, Quiet (Lot 104) is a sculptural work that is composed of four children’ heads stacked on top of each other in a surrealistic fashion. Visually, they look like they are on the brink of toppling. In reality, they are firmly held together. Psychologically, it produces an interesting contradiction in the viewer’s mind. The teacup at the base looks like it is a ride from an amusement park. The person at the bottom placidly bath in the blue water. This depiction often appears in Yoshitomo Nara’s painting where the lonely protagonist feels safe being submerged in water. All four characters in Quiet, Quiet are about to enter a peaceful realm away from the chaotic reality.

More from Asian Contemporary Art (Day Sale)

View All
View All