MORITA SHIRYU (1912-1998)
MORITA SHIRYU (1912-1998)

Choo (Conspicuousness), 1969

細節
MORITA SHIRYU (1912-1998)
Choo (Conspicuousness), 1969
Aluminium flake pigment in polyvinyl acetate medium, yellow alkyd varnish on paper
31 1/8 x 62 in. (79.1 x 157.5 cm.)
Artist's certificate on reverse, titled Choo (Conspicuousness), signed Morita Shiryu and sealed Sei no ji, dated 1969
來源
Yamada Art Gallery, Kyoto

榮譽呈獻

Takaaki Murakami
Takaaki Murakami

拍品專文

Morita Shiryu made his name in the post-war Japanese art history by revolutionizing the traditional Eastern art format – calligraphy. He valued the moment of true feelings in the process of creation, and for this reason, his emphasized on the expression of emotions, the movement and rhythm of life. He pushed the boundary between the West and the East, where his almost-abstraction-like artistic language liberated his works from the traditional approach of calligraphy; he also blurred the line between painting and calligraphy, as his works could be seen as both.
For a similar work by the same artist titled Chu, 1969, see Morita Shiryu,ed., The Works of Morita Shiryu Selected by the Artist (Kyoto: Bokusui Press, 1970), pl. 63.

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