Date: October 28th - December 11th, 2010
The Flomenhaft Gallery is proud to present Roger Shimomura’s newest series of artworks, “An American Knockoff.” The title eludes to Shimomura’s experience as a third generation American citizen who is all too often asked what part of Japan he comes from, and is too often misconnected to so-called “oriental” physical and behavioral traits. Actually he was born in Seattle and unfortunately spent several years of his childhood in an internment camp, Minidoka, in Idaho. These works are his “attempt to ameliorate the outrage of the misconceptions” and “in tongue-in-cheek fashion he becomes the same stereotypes.”
Shimomura’s newest
paintings, in fabulous color, almost all include a self portrait. We
see him, in art critic Lucy Lippard’s words “kicking ass” at his own
country. They are dynamic, filled with references to pop art, in works
such as “American vs. Disney Stereotypes.” The paintings
include Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny, Donald Duck, Popeye and the three
little pigs, also Ukiyo theater folk. Often mistaken for Chinese, he
goes for it and represents himself as a “Chinese Imposter,” as a
General leading his Chinese army, and in other works he stands in for a
Chinese communist, but also points at the color confusion by
representing celebrants of Mao. A most powerful work represents the
conundrum in Shimomura’s life, “American vs. Japs.” It shows
him acting the part of a Japanese American, making a distinction
between himself and the Japanese enemy during WWII. Here he kicks the
Jap’s ass. What a turn of events.
Roger
Shimomura, in painting, prints and theater pieces has always addressed
the sociopolitical issues of Asian Americans. He has had over 125 solo
exhibitions and has presented theater pieces throughout the country.
He is the recipient of more than 30 grants, four of which came from the
National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Painting and Performance
Art. He has lectured and has been a visiting artist at more than 200
universities, and the College Art Association presented him with the
Artist Award for Most Distinguished Body of Work in 2002 for his four
year, twelve museum tour of the painting exhibition “An American
Diary.” It was based on the diaries his grandmother kept from the time
she came to America as a photograph wife and includes her experiences
in Minidoka. Shimomura was a Distinguished Professor at the School of
Fine Arts at the University of Kansas, Lawrence, from 1969 until he
retired in 2004. He is now the University Distinguished Professor of
Art Emeritus of the University of Kansas.
Presently there is a travelling show entitled “Yellow Terror: the Collection and Paintings of Roger Shimomura,”
co-curated by Roger and Dr. Stacey Uradomo-Barre, the curator for the
Art in Public Places Program of the Hawaiian State Foundation on
Culture and the Arts. It was produced by the Wing Luke Museum,
Seattle, our nation’s only pan-Asian Pacific American museum and an
affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution. From Wing Luke it will go
to the Richmond Center for Visual Arts, Western Michigan University,
opening on October 21st.
Read more at Flomenthaft Gallery
Smart post and so good blog
thanks for you good information and i hope to subscribe and visit my blog Articles2Day.Org and more The Industrial Marketing Plan thanks again admin