Yuki Katsura (original) (raw)
Katsura Yuki (japanisch 桂 ゆき, Vorname bei gleicher Lesung eigentlich 雪 geschrieben; geb. 10. Oktober 1913 in Tokio; gest. 5. Februar 1991 in Tokio) war eine japanische Malerin während der Shōwa-Zeit. Ihr Bruder ist der Schriftsteller .
Property | Value |
---|---|
dbo:abstract | Katsura Yuki (japanisch 桂 ゆき, Vorname bei gleicher Lesung eigentlich 雪 geschrieben; geb. 10. Oktober 1913 in Tokio; gest. 5. Februar 1991 in Tokio) war eine japanische Malerin während der Shōwa-Zeit. Ihr Bruder ist der Schriftsteller . (de) 桂 ゆき(かつら ゆき、1913年10月10日 – 1991年2月5日)は、東京府東京市本郷区出身の洋画家。本名は桂 雪子(かつら ゆきこ)。初めは「ユキ子」、1970年代頃から「ゆき」と称する。日本における前衛女性画家の先駆者であり、第一人者。戦前から逸早く先端的なコラージュの手法を、シュルレアリスムから距離をおきながら独自に展開し、生活用具や動物など実在と抽象的な形を混在させた独自の表現を探求した。小説家の桂英澄は弟。 (ja) Yuki Katsura (桂ゆき, Katsura Yuki, also Katsura Yukiko, 10 October 1913 – 5 February 1991) was a Japanese artist whose career spanned from the prewar to the postwar eras. During her six-decade career, Katsura did not conform to one particular artistic genre or style, instead employing a variety of approaches including painting, mixed media collage, and caricature to depict a range of subjects using folkloric allegory, religious iconography, realism, and experiments into abstraction. She was trained in both Japanese and Western painting styles and traditions, which was a rare accomplishment for a woman of her time. Katsura engaged with subjects that responded to critical socio-political events in mid-century Japan, such as societal expectations for Japanese women, the militarization of Japan, the post-war occupation, the rise of nuclear power, and gender equality. Her diverse approaches, engagement with critical issues, and adherence to personal autonomy gained her critical acclaim; she has been called a "pioneer among women artists," and is considered influential to the genesis of the Japanese avant-garde before and after the Asia Pacific War. Katsura has been the subject of several large museum retrospectives in Japan, including the Shimonoseki Municipal Museum of Art (1991); Ibaraki Prefectural Museum of Modern Art (1998); and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo (2013). While she is very well-known in her native Japan, Katsura was left out of the canonization of Japanese art and art market in a Western context for many years. In the 2010s, she became the subject of more curatorial and art historical interest and publications in English. Katsura's artworks are included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura & Hayama; Ohara Museum of Art; Itabashi Art Museum; the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo; the Yokohama Museum of Art; and the University of Arizona Museum of Art. (en) |
dbo:wikiPageID | 66563158 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageLength | 30770 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) |
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID | 1102326749 (xsd:integer) |
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink | dbr:Castle_Bravo dbr:Museum_of_Contemporary_Art_Tokyo dbr:Museum_of_Modern_Art,_Kamakura_&_Hayama dbr:Bikini_Atoll dbr:Bombing_of_Tokyo dbr:Anma dbr:Interracial_marriage dbr:Propaganda dbc:1913_births dbr:Constitution_of_Japan dbr:Oil_painting dbr:Tokyo_Metropolitan_Art_Museum dbr:Yokohama_Museum_of_Art dbr:Trompe-l'œil dbr:Gender_equality dbr:Minoru_Kawabata dbr:Mount_Fuji dbr:University_of_Arizona_Museum_of_Art dbr:Another_Country_(novel) dbr:Lissone dbr:Style_(visual_arts) dbr:Commodity dbr:Yutaka_Haniya dbr:Yves_Klein dbr:Fauvism dbr:Iconography dbr:Surrealism dbr:Taboo dbr:National_Mobilization_Law dbc:Postwar_Japan dbr:Bambari dbc:1991_deaths dbc:Avant-garde_art dbr:Central_African_Republic dbr:Tsuguharu_Foujita dbr:Tuberculosis dbc:Japanese_painters dbr:Dada dbr:Daigo_Fukuryū_Maru dbr:Folklore dbr:Nihonga dbr:Pablo_Picasso dbr:Pacific_War dbr:Paris dbr:Caricature dbr:Joryū_Gaka_Kyōkai dbr:Realism_(arts) dbr:Hideko_Fukushima dbr:James_Baldwin dbr:Jean_Arp dbr:Tarō_Okamoto dbr:The_Japan_Times dbr:Female_liberation dbc:Abstract_expressionist_artists dbc:Surrealist_artists dbr:Abstract_art dbr:Abstraction_(art) dbr:Jiro_Yoshihara dbr:Kasuri dbr:Kazuo_Shiraga dbr:Kenzo_Okada dbr:Kimono dbr:Kōbō_Abe dbr:Bird-and-flower_painting dbr:Taisho_Democracy dbr:Collage dbr:Toshinobu_Onosato dbr:Arte_Povera dbc:Japanese_women_artists dbr:Assemblage_(art) dbc:Yōga_painters dbr:Avant-garde dbr:Marxism dbr:Ibaraki_Prefecture dbr:Kinosuke_Ebihara dbr:Migishi_Setsuko dbr:New_York_City dbr:Ohara_Museum_of_Art dbr:Okada_Saburōsuke dbr:Shimonoseki dbr:Yayoi_Kusama dbr:Kiyoteru_Hanada dbr:Seiji_Tōgō dbr:Washi dbr:Nationalism dbr:War_artist dbr:Tenkō dbr:Tokyo_Imperial_University dbr:Yōga dbr:Yoru_no_Kai dbr:Retrospective_exhibition dbr:Takeo_Yamaguchi dbr:Chinese_ink_and_brush_painting dbr:Motonaga_Sadamasa |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate | dbt:Authority_control dbt:Cite_journal dbt:Fact dbt:Reflist dbt:Sfn dbt:Short_description dbt:Use_dmy_dates dbt:Sfnref |
dct:subject | dbc:1913_births dbc:Postwar_Japan dbc:1991_deaths dbc:Avant-garde_art dbc:Japanese_painters dbc:Abstract_expressionist_artists dbc:Surrealist_artists dbc:Japanese_women_artists dbc:Yōga_painters |
rdf:type | owl:Thing |
rdfs:comment | Katsura Yuki (japanisch 桂 ゆき, Vorname bei gleicher Lesung eigentlich 雪 geschrieben; geb. 10. Oktober 1913 in Tokio; gest. 5. Februar 1991 in Tokio) war eine japanische Malerin während der Shōwa-Zeit. Ihr Bruder ist der Schriftsteller . (de) 桂 ゆき(かつら ゆき、1913年10月10日 – 1991年2月5日)は、東京府東京市本郷区出身の洋画家。本名は桂 雪子(かつら ゆきこ)。初めは「ユキ子」、1970年代頃から「ゆき」と称する。日本における前衛女性画家の先駆者であり、第一人者。戦前から逸早く先端的なコラージュの手法を、シュルレアリスムから距離をおきながら独自に展開し、生活用具や動物など実在と抽象的な形を混在させた独自の表現を探求した。小説家の桂英澄は弟。 (ja) Yuki Katsura (桂ゆき, Katsura Yuki, also Katsura Yukiko, 10 October 1913 – 5 February 1991) was a Japanese artist whose career spanned from the prewar to the postwar eras. During her six-decade career, Katsura did not conform to one particular artistic genre or style, instead employing a variety of approaches including painting, mixed media collage, and caricature to depict a range of subjects using folkloric allegory, religious iconography, realism, and experiments into abstraction. She was trained in both Japanese and Western painting styles and traditions, which was a rare accomplishment for a woman of her time. Katsura engaged with subjects that responded to critical socio-political events in mid-century Japan, such as societal expectations for Japanese women, the militarization of Japan, (en) |
rdfs:label | Katsura Yuki (de) 桂ゆき (ja) Yuki Katsura (en) |
owl:sameAs | http://d-nb.info/gnd/128680148 http://viaf.org/viaf/13368227 wikidata:Yuki Katsura http://data.bibliotheken.nl/id/thes/p402219465 dbpedia-de:Yuki Katsura dbpedia-ja:Yuki Katsura https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4TDoR |
prov:wasDerivedFrom | wikipedia-en:Yuki_Katsura?oldid=1102326749&ns=0 |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf | wikipedia-en:Yuki_Katsura |
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of | dbr:Deaths_in_February_1991 dbr:Madokoro_Akutagawa_Saori dbr:Joryū_Gaka_Kyōkai dbr:Hideko_Fukushima dbr:Migishi_Setsuko dbr:Yoshishige_Saitō |
is foaf:primaryTopic of | wikipedia-en:Yuki_Katsura |