Exhibition

Keiichi Tanaami

28 Sep 2017 – 18 Nov 2017

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Gary Tatintsian Gallery

Moscow
Moscow, Russia

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Keiichi Tanaami is one of the leading pop artists of postwar Japan and has been active as a multi-genre artist since the 1960s as a graphic designer, illustrator, video artist and fine artist.

About

His series of erotic paintings featuring Hollywood actresses done in the early 70s became an important body of work and Tanaami became known as an artist with a witty eye for American culture. In 1975, Tanaami became the first art director of the Japanese edition of Playboy Magazine, “Monthly Playboy”, and went to New York once again to visit Playboy’s head office. The editor there took him to Andy Warhol’s Factory. Eroticism in Tanami’s works reflects the national culture and color, and the images of young women, with their almost architectural accuracy, are reflected in paintings, films and sculptures. Tanaami has worked as a professor at Kyoto University of Art and Design since 1991, where he has helped bring up young new artists. Tanaami’s works have had significant influence on artists such as Takashi Murakami, Tabaimo, and many others.Themes in his works – a dead goldfish, deformed characters, rays of light, helical pine trees, roaring American bombers, firebombs dropped from planes, fleeing masses, flashes from bombs reflecting in water – reflect images from a world of dreams and childhood memories.

At the beginning of his career, Tanaami devoted particular  attention to American experimental films (‘Good-by Elvis and USA’ (1971), took part in happenings staged by Yoko Ono, and shot videos with Nam June. At the same time, he illustrated fashion magazines and created collages and paintings. During the 60s, he busied himself as a successful illustrator and graphic designer while also actively participating in the Neo-Dada organization with Ushio Shinohara, Robert Rauschenberg and Michel Tapié. 

In 1967, Tanaami took his first trip to New York City. There he came face to face with the works of Andy Warhol, shining brightly amidst the whirlwind of prospering American consumerism, and Tanaami was struck by the new possibilities of art within the world of design.

Tanaami was born in Tokyo in 1936. He was 9 years old when Tokyo was bombed during the Great Tokyo Air Raid of World War II in 1945. Images seared into the back of his mind at this time would become major motifs in his artwork: war; roaring American bombers; firebombs dropped from planes; eroticism; American consumerism; and, in a later period, philosophical reflections on the meaning of life and death.

At the height of psychedelic culture and pop art, Tanaami’s kitschy, colorful illustrations and design work received high acclaim in both Japan and abroad. He created album cover art for the legendary bands The Monkees and Jefferson Airplane and, in 1968, his piece “NO MORE WAR” won top prize in an antiwar poster contest organized by Avant-Garde Magazine

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