ART-PRESENTATION: Colorful Japan

Left: Kazumasa Nagai, Human Rights - Living Together, 1989. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Muneji Satomi, Japan, 1937. Collection Stedelijk Museum AmsterdamYou don’t have to travel too far back to explore the art of Japanese poster design, as being celebrated in a new exhibition at Amsterdam’s Stedelijk Museum this September. “Colorful Japan” is the Stedelijk Museum’s posthumous tribute to Japanese graphic designer Shigeru Watano (1937-2012) and features 226 Japanese posters on display in the Gallery of Honor.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Stedelijk Museum Archive

Shigeru Watano, who lived in the Netherlands, was a vital link between the Stedelijk and numerous Japanese designers. Through his help, the Stedelijk was able to acquire many Japanese posters, and Japanese designers generously donated their work to the museum. In 2018, DNP Foundation for Cultural Promotion presented us with a lavish gift of 92 posters, thanks to which the Stedelijk collection of 800 Japanese posters is leading in Europe. The exhibition “Colorful Japan” showcases a cross-section of Japan’s unique graphic design with work by designers such as amongst others Hiroshi Ochi, Kazumasa Nagai, Ikko Tanaka, Yusaku Kamekura, Mitsuo Katsui, Shigeo Fukuda, U.G. Sato, Ken Miki and Eiko Ishioka. The oldest poster dates from 1937, the most recent from 2018. One wall of the exhibition is devoted exclusively to the internationally-famed graphic designer and artist Tadanori Yokoo. In 1974, with the help of Watano, the Stedelijk was the first European institute to display his work. Compared to its European cousin, Japanese poster design is a relatively recent discipline. It wasn’t until the early 20th Century that posters became used for advertising. The posters vary widely in style; some flaunt vivid tones, and others are quiet, reserved and minimal. Japanese designers explore a very different visual language to that found in Europe. Japanese visual culture is less direct and morenuanced, very often poetic. Meaning that, to our eyes, the image doesn’t always seem to match the subject, like a magnified character with a lyrical text for a pop concert, for instance. Japanese characters play an important decorative role when positioned horizontally (European style) and vertically (the traditional Japanese manner). Particularly after World War II, designers use photography to great effect as the medium becomes rapidly accessible and Japanese manufacturers like Canon and Nikon became major players.

Info: Curator: Carolien Glazenburg, Stedelijk Museum, Museumplein 10, Amsterdam, Duration: 7/9/19-2/2/20, Days & Hours: Mon-Thu & Sat-Sun 10:00-18:00, Fri 10:00-22:00, www.stedelijk.nl

Left: Ryuichi Yamashiro, Forest, 1955. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Kazumasa Nagai, Life, 2010. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Left: Ryuichi Yamashiro, Forest, 1955. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Kazumasa Nagai, Life, 2010. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

 

 

Left: Ikko Tanaka, Noh Performance, 1958. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Tadanori Yokoo, Amazo, 1989. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Left: Ikko Tanaka, Noh Performance, 1958. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Tadanori Yokoo, Amazo, 1989. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

 

 

Left: Ikko Kiyoshi Awazu, The 5th Exhibition of Contemporary Japanese Sculpture, 1973. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Ikko Tanaka, Japan, 1986. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Left: Ikko Kiyoshi Awazu, The 5th Exhibition of Contemporary Japanese Sculpture, 1973. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Ikko Tanaka, Japan, 1986. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

 

 

Left: Tadanori Yokoo & Will van Sambeek, Tadanori Yokoo, 1974. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Shigeo Fukuda, Victory, 1976. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Left: Tadanori Yokoo & Will van Sambeek, Tadanori Yokoo, 1974. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Shigeo Fukuda, Victory, 1976. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

 

 

Left: Yusaku Kamekura, Nikon SP, 1957. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Center: Tadahito Nadamoto, A story about the bomb, 1969. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Kazumasa Nagai, Himeji Shirotopia Exhibition 1989, 1988. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Left: Yusaku Kamekura, Nikon SP, 1957. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Center: Tadahito Nadamoto, A story about the bomb, 1969. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam. Right: Kazumasa Nagai, Himeji Shirotopia Exhibition 1989, 1988. Collection Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam