<b>TRANSIENT</b> / Toko Shinoda20th Century$40,000</em>

$0.00

ARTIST: Toko Shinoda (1913-2021)

TITLE: Transient

MEDIUM: Pigment on paper

DATE: 20th century

DIMENSIONS: 22 x 30 1/8 inches

CONDITION: Excellent; no problems to note

$40,000.00

.

Get in touch to purchase

Add To Cart
 

 
 
 
 

Details

Born in Manchuria (occupied China), Toko Shinoda returned to the homeland with her fellow native Japanese after the war. Shinoda recounted how she never felt welcomed or at home in Japan.

This alienation afforded her freedom from the strict Japanese social structure and allowed her to pursue a career in the visual arts, an unconventional vocation for a woman of her generation. Shinoda's early influence was calligraphy expressed as sumi work on paper. However, internationally-minded artistic movements, such as abstract expressionism, inspired Shinoda to move beyond the calligraphic idiom and dabble with abstraction. In this new format, Shinoda found early success with a 1953 exhibition of her work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. She subsequently moved to New York three years later, residing there until 1958. During her stay, she came into contact with the work of Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell, and other key figures of the abstract expressionist movement. This left a deep impression on her – she later praised these artists as "very generous people" with whom she "would share ideas and opinions on our work." During this time, her work was represented by Betty Parsons Gallery and placed in a number of high-profile collectors. Upon her return to Japan, Shinoda honed he work beyond traditional calligraphy towards an expressive, abstract style. By the 1960s, she began working in lithography with hand-applied embellishments. It was her printed work that became a force in the field and finally provided traction for her acceptance in Japanese artistic circles.

Transient is an original work produced on paper. This elegant painting showcases three large brush strokes that unify at the center of the composition suggesting the fluidity of water or wind, while four finer strokes in gold pigment streak across in opposition at the center and at the top. The work demonstrates the hand of the master painter, which possesses both graceful and powerful gestural movements. This work invokes the confident and collected hand of the composer at the helm of the orchestra as easily as the unyielding arm of the samurai, slashing in determined strokes. The painting's title may be a commentary on nature: as all things ultimately pass from sight, much like the gesture of the artist's hand.

Connoisseur's Note

Shinoda's large-scale paintings on paper rarely come up for sale. Original work on unmounted paper is also a rarity, as we are more likely to encounter her paintings as screens or framed and mounted onto wood or even canvas. The condition of this piece is pristine, making this painting an ideal acquisition for the discriminating connoisseur or institution. This work comes with a certificate of registration that recognizes this as an original work in the hand of Shinoda.