“I think there are
two types of artists,
those who like the process and those who like the result.
I am the former.”
Keiichi Tanaami
those who like the process and those who like the result.
I am the former.”
Keiichi Tanaami
Embracing a wide variety of art forms from painting to
sculpture, from drawing to collage, from animation to books and with substantial
bodies of work in each, the Japanese pop artist, Keiichi Tanaami is prolific
to say the least. As he told Gadabout’s Andrey
Bold “I don’t play golf, so I don’t really have anything to do besides
work. I let off steam by alternating between different projects. I'd work on
animation, then, move on to painting once I get tired, and when I get tired of
that switch to writing. I don’t really get stressed working because I don’t see
it as work.”
It was in the late 1960’s, after seeing Andy Warhol’s work first, hand
that Tanaami decided to embrace a variety of genres. As he says in his biography “Like Warhol, I
decided then not to limit myself to any one medium, to just design or fine art,
but to instead do what I wanted using a variety of methods."
At the same time Tanaami also discovered and was influenced
by American counter culture. As he has said “I
visited America in 1968, at a time when the country was full of turmoil—the
assassinations, the protests. I saw underground comics then, like Robert Crumb.
I also discovered pornographic newspapers.” A discovery which, in the early
1970’s, saw him produce a witty series of erotic paintings based upon American film
stars that helped to cement the introduction of pop art in Japan.
But Tanaami’s introduction to
things American stated a couple of decades earlier as he experienced the firebombing
of Tokyo during the Second World War followed by a diet of American B-grade
movies after its end. With the latter distorting reality for the teenager, for as
he has said “when you are watching over 500 movies a year, the line
between fiction and reality gets blurred, and you end up in a state of
confusion where truth and falsehood are all mixed up, as though you are
glimpsing out at reality from a loophole in the dream world.” To which he adds “I had the
most fun making pictures from what I remembered of movies and scenes I had just
watched.”
A brush with death in his mid 40’s from
an attack of pleurisy that saw Tanaami hospitalized for four months and
experiencing nightly hallucinations caused by the drugs he was taking awakened his
appreciation for the fragility of life causing a burst of creativity. As he has
said “I found a connection between being conscious of death so
close to myself and to being alive, and that became the powerful energy that
supported my creativity."
With his personal dreams, memories and hallucinations mixed up
with Eastern and Western influences Tanaami’s works depict a journey that
revels in its production. As he says “The only thing I am certain of is the impact
of my childhood experiences. The subjects that are of interest to me – that
indescribable sense of touch when layering coats of paints, the process of
incorporating inspiration from movies into a painting – are the same for me to
this day. My approach to painting hasn't changed
at all since my childhood days.”
His current exhibition Keiichi
Tanaami Collages is on show at Chicago’s Corbett
vs. Dempsey until the 6th of June.
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