Seiko Kanno

Seiko Kanno (菅野 聖子, nee Seiko Aizawa, 1933–1988) is a participant of the 'third generation' of the Gutai Art Association from the mid 1960s onward. Her paintings are often characterized by an inorganic composition, seemingly devoid of emotional expression. Kanno is also a member of an experimental, avant-garde group of poets, in which she composed highly visual poems using symbols and katakana syllables. Her work additionally suggests her admiration of music, physics and mathematics, to which she became devoted towards in her later years.

Seiko Kanno
Born1933
Sendai, Japan
Died1988
NationalityJapanese
MovementGutai Group

Biography

Seiko Kanno was born in Sendai, Japan in 1933. She began painting and composing poems in high school. Kanno graduated from the Faculty of Human Development and Culture at Fukushima University where she often entered her abstract paintings into publicly sponsored exhibitions.[1] Kanno began working with collage upon moving to Kobe, using newspaper and cardboard. Starting in 1964, she began showing her work to Gutai Art exhibitions, becoming an official member in 1968. She returned to painting in the late 60's. In 1965, Kanno moved to Tokyo along with her husband who had been transferred there for work. In Tokyo, she joined an art study group, led by poet Seiichi Niikuni, where she composed semiotic poems and began to introduce geometrical patterns in her paintings, calling these works Kigō shi (code poetry).[2]

In later years, Kanno audited university classes in physics and mathematics at Kyoto University, Kwansei Gakuin University, and elsewhere. Much of her later works specifically draw inspiration from these subjects.[3][4][5]

Selected exhibitions

Solo

1997 Ashiya City Museum of Art & History
2003 ARTCOURT Gallery, Osaka
2013 Miyagi Museum of Art, Sendai

Group

1966 15th Gutai Art Exhibition, guati Pinacotheca
1970 5th Japan Art Festival, Solomon r. guggenheim Museum, New York
1992-1993 Gutai I, II, III, ashiya City Museum of art & history
2004 The 50th Anniversary of Gutai Retrospective Exhibition, hyōgo Prefectural Museum of art, Kobe
2012 Gutai: The Spirit of an Era, The National art Center, Tokyo

Writings

Seiko Kanno published an anthology titled Mr. SU in 1971, through the National Museum of Art, Osaka.

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gollark: PHP is the reason DC suffers horrible bugs constantly and hatcheries are kind of bad in some ways.
gollark: To be fair, though, JS frameworks are mostly client-side and PHP is server-side. That doesn't excuse the evil of PHP generally though.

References

  1. LOMA: Literature on Modern Art : an Annual Bibliography. Lund Humphries Publishers. 1971-01-01.
  2. Tiampo, Ming; Monroe, Alexandra (2013). gutai: splendid playground. New York: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.
  3. "KANNO Seiko Work|Artrip Museum : Osaka City Museum of Modern Art". www.city.osaka.lg.jp. Retrieved 2017-03-12.
  4. Tiampo, Ming (2011-03-15). Gutai: Decentering Modernism. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226801667.
  5. Gibson, Roland (2004-01-01). 呼応する精神: ギブソン・ギャラリー収蔵品で見る1960年代の日本現代美術. Roland Gibson Art Gallery, State University of New York at Potsdam. ISBN 9780942746198.
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