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View Full Version : Roger Shimomura:New painting exhibit in KC


vsoy
Aug 27th, 2006, 02:18 PM
Media/style: painting, woodblock print, pop art
When: Sept 1- Oct 30, 2006
Where: Jan Weiner Gallery (4800 Liberty st, Kansas City, MO)
Phone: 816-931-8755
NB: The last time he had an exhibit through this gallery, I had such a hard time going to see it because you have to call ahead of time to go see it. It was around the time of the end of the exhibit, and I had limited time constraints but it was pretty annoying that this gallery didn't have a set time it would be open and I couldn't just show up. I dunno if other galleries are like this that you have to make an appointment.

Webpage: http://www.rshim.com/
Articles and samples of work: http://www2.ljworld.com/news/arts/shimomura/
http://www.kansascity.com/images/kansascity/kansascitystar/news/eternal_08-27-2006_PPNHO10.jpg

http://etc.lawrence.com/galleries/images/shimomura7/thumb/history_art2.jpg
http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2004/may/02/a_sansei_story/?shimomura
A sansei story

Despite pending retirement, third-generation Japanese-American who built art career around identity has more teaching to do

By Mindie Paget (Contact)

Sunday, May 2, 2004

Roger Shimomura was 6 or 7 years old when his family drove 200 miles from Seattle to Cannon Beach, Ore., only to be turned away by a resort owner who refused to rent to Japanese people.

They'd made reservations weeks in advance and had been looking forward to a relaxing vacation at a cabin by the sea.

Shimomura remembers his parents talking in hushed voices outside their 1946 Chevrolet about what to do.

Eventually the owner changed his mind and offered them the cabin furthest from the office. It hadn't been used in years and was a mess. The Shimomuras drove to the nearest grocery store, bought armloads of cleaning supplies and spent the rest of the day scrubbing. The cabin gleamed when they were done.

After two days, they tidied up and returned to Seattle.

That was nearly 60 years ago. But time hasn't washed Shimomura's first brush with racism from his memory.

And these days, the third-generation Japanese-American (or sansei) doesn't keep quiet about such injustices.

Shimomura, a painter, performance artist and distinguished professor of art at Kansas University, has gained an international reputation with paintings that are beautiful in a deceptive sort of way. With a look influenced by American comic books and Japanese woodblock prints, Shimomura's works lure you in with gumball colors, crisp lines, flat tones and often-recognizable imagery of Americana and traditional Japan. Then they slap you when you realize what you're looking at: blunt interpretations of racism, documentations of life inside Japanese internment camps, subtle political statements about identity.

The desired result is not necessarily shame but enlightenment, says Shimomura, who next week will retire from teaching after 35 years at KU.
Artist Roger Shimomura is set to retire next week after 35 years of teaching at Kansas University.

Artist Roger Shimomura is set to retire next week after 35 years of teaching at Kansas University.

"Raising the sensitivity level and the awareness level -- if you can do that, you've done something. It's not meant to be any kind of manual for understanding all those things because, first of all, I'm not claiming to be an expert. Number two: I'm not claiming to understand what all the issues are that should be included by any means," he says.

"But what I AM interested in doing is saying, ëHey, there's something here that we all need to pay attention to and be sensitive to,' just so that maybe you'll stop and think before you say that next stupid thing."

Ironically, it took a Kansas farmer who uttered just such a stupid thing to focus Shimomura on creating the kind of identity-driven art that has become his hallmark.
ëGee-shee girls and kimonahs'

Shimomura attended an auction outside Lawrence in 1972. He'd been standing next to a farmer for a long time and, during a break in the bidding, the farmer addressed him.

"Excuse me, but I've been overhearing you speak the language and I was wondering how you came to speak it so well. Where are you from?" he inquired.

"Seattle," Shimomura said.

"That's not what I mean. Where are your parents from?" the farmer countered.

"Well, my mother was born in Idaho, and my father was born in Seattle," Shimomura said. Of course he knew what the farmer was after.

Finally, the farmer said, "Are you Indian?"

"No. I'm Japanese-American," Shimomura replied. "I teach at KU."
Roger Shimomura visits with gallery-goers during the opening of his exhibition, "Stereotypes and Admonitions," at the Jan Weiner Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. The December reception was complemented by a slide lecture that Shimomura delivered Jan. 9 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. The exhibit then traveled to the Greg Kucera Gallery in Seattle.

Roger Shimomura visits with gallery-goers during the opening of his exhibition, "Stereotypes and Admonitions," at the Jan Weiner Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. The December reception was complemented by a slide lecture that Shimomura delivered Jan. 9 at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. The exhibit then traveled to the Greg Kucera Gallery in Seattle.

That did it. The farmer broke into some kind of World War II, GI slang and explained that he and "the little lady" collected pictures of "them gee-shee girls wearing them kimonahs."

"Do you do pictures like that?" he asked Shimomura.

Exasperated, Shimomura said, "Yes," and left it at that.

On the way home, he found a book at the Kansas Union based on Japanese woodblock prints. He combined a slew of iconic Japanese images into one painting and called it, sarcastically, "Oriental Masterpiece."

When he showed the work in Seattle with six other paintings, it garnered all the attention. Essentially what people said, Shimomura recalls, was, "It's good to see you doing work that looks like you."

"And I really felt as I was doing this painting that I was working with something that was quite foreign because I had never had these kinds of things with me when I grew up," he says.

Fascinated by the reaction, however, Shimomura spun the first painting into a series of 45 or 50 "Oriental Masterpieces."
History revealed

Shimomura, 64, was born in Seattle in 1939. His family's world was upended on Feb. 19, 1942, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 in retaliation for the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor three months earlier. The Shimomuras joined more than 120,000 Japanese-Americans forced to give up most of their worldly possessions and move to internment camps scattered across the West.

Shimomura, who was 2 at the time, spent the next two years with his parents and grandparents behind a barbed wire fence at Camp Minidoka in Idaho.

"There are very, very few things that my parents ever talked about regarding the camps," Shimomura says. "For 40 years, they kept me totally in the dark. They said nothing."

A party to celebrate artist Roger Shimomura's 35-year contribution to Kansas University will be at 8 p.m. May 14 at Liberty Hall, 642 Mass. The event -- which will feature cake and champagne, six live performances by former students, and a DJ -- is free and open to the public. There will be a cash bar.

The next day, Shimomura will have a retirement dinner at his home, 1424 Wagon Wheel Road. A donation of $1,000 to the newly formed Shimomura Faculty Research Fund gets the donor and a guest into the dinner, a black and white lithograph by Shimomura and their name on a plaque in KU's Art and Design Building.

Reservations for the dinner must be received by noon Monday and can be made by calling Shimomura at 842-8166 or Judy McCrea at 864-2952.

All contributions are welcome. Make checks payable to KUEA, Shimomura Faculty Research Fund, Kansas University Endowment, attn: Anne E. Johnson, P.O. Box 928, Lawrence 66044.

The fund has been established with an initial gift of $25,000 from Shimomura. It's the first fund dedicated to faculty research development in studio art at KU.

But the reparations movement got under way about the time Shimomura obtained 56 years worth of diaries kept by his grandmother, Toku Shimomura, and his parents finally started answering his questions.

Shimomura based several series of paintings on the ordeal both as he remembers it and the way his grandmother recorded it.
Warhol and white lies

Shimomura developed his artistic sensibilities during the 1960s, when West Coast funk artists like Robert Arneson were giving the finger to tradition with their irreverent artworks. After a year of military service in Korea and a few unhappy years as a commercial designer, Shimomura swapped coasts and walked straight into the pop art movement at Syracuse University.

He fell under the spell of Andy Warhol. He made silkscreens of repeated images on canvas. He even did a multimedia presentation as part of his graduate work in which he fabricated an interview with Warhol, lied about having discovered a film by Warhol at a New York library and made up a bunch of other facts. It turned out to be his earliest stab at performance art.

"I found that in some ways it really didn't matter whether it was the truth or not," Shimomura says. "The fact was that everyone really enjoyed the performance, so that gave a certain amount of credence to the performance in my eyes, and I think that sort of got me thinking about it later on."

The intricately choreographed fib must have impressed someone at Kansas University because when Shimomura graduated in 1969, he had a job waiting in Lawrence.
Early years

He didn't plan on staying long, but the political energy on campus redeemed Shimomura's preconceived notions of Lawrence.

"I remember being overcome with that sense as I stood across the street from the Union, watching it in flames," he recalls of the 1970 Kansas Union blaze. "And I have to say that there was a certain kind of rush of excitement then that this was going to be far more interesting than I'd anticipated."

The chaotic spirit of the era infected Shimomura and the five other young faculty members who joined the art department in 1969.

Jerry Lubensky, KU art professor, remembers a class project in which Shimomura, ever the prankster, assigned students to carve pumpkins and deliver them to the chancellor's office.
Roger Shimomura jokes with students before his performance art class last fall at Kansas University. Shimomura is known for his dry sense of humor, but he also has a reputation as a brutally honest, though respected, teacher who has reduced students to tears.

Roger Shimomura jokes with students before his performance art class last fall at Kansas University. Shimomura is known for his dry sense of humor, but he also has a reputation as a brutally honest, though respected, teacher who has reduced students to tears.

And something about a happening -- "kids running around naked and people wrapped in tape" -- in the auditorium of Strong Hall, where the art department was housed in those days. The administration was there then, too. Peter Thompson, art department chair at the time, got a call at home that Saturday morning from an alarmed administrator.

"And all the young faculty were involved in this," Lubensky says.
Tough guy

Shimomura's known among students for his biting honesty. Some of them have horror stories of brutal critiques that reduced them to tears. Yet they respect Shimomura's opinion.

"He is tough, forthright and has no inhibition whatsoever to smear your weaknesses in your face while others cringe," says Mark Florance, a graphic artist who graduated from KU in May 2001. Shimomura chaired his thesis committee.

"He did not scare me or intimidate me because I knew he was someone who had something valuable to offer me. He almost always hit the nail on the head when he cut down what or how I was approaching my art."

Shimomura's influence has proven to be long-lasting.
Roger Shimomura adds color to a new painting that incorporates Dr. Suess characters into a collage of figures conforming to racial stereotypes of Asian-Americans. He worked at his home studio last week.

Roger Shimomura adds color to a new painting that incorporates Dr. Suess characters into a collage of figures conforming to racial stereotypes of Asian-Americans. He worked at his home studio last week.

"Roger's ghost is in my studio every time I work -- coaxing me to be honest, to find my core, to do the work that is MINE," says Marvel Maring, the fine arts librarian at the University of Nebraska-Omaha who met Shimomura in 1980 as a freshman art student at KU.

Shimomura started KU's performance art program in 1985, the same year he began experimenting with the form himself. His course has become part of a new area of study at KU called expanded media, which also includes classes on installation art, mixed media and computer and book arts.

Through the years, as Shimomura's art career has taken off, his commitment to students hasn't faltered, they say, despite the fact that he's often away from the classroom.

"In three years of meetings during my MFA work, Roger Shimomura never canceled or rescheduled a meeting. He really has the student's welfare as a top priority," says Julie Green, assistant professor of art at Oregon State University.

"Between 1996 and 2000, I requested 100 letters of recommendation for various teaching positions. Roger kindly provided all of those letters. Furthermore, he sent the letters off the same day he received the request."
A magnetic enigma

Punctuality is, indeed, one of Shimomura's trademarks. He's organized, efficient.
Roger Shimomura works in his home office, which is packed with books, binders full of slides of his artwork, family photographs and collectibles. Shimomura spends hours at his computer and can often be found surfing eBay, a Web site that feeds his former auction-going habit.

Roger Shimomura works in his home office, which is packed with books, binders full of slides of his artwork, family photographs and collectibles. Shimomura spends hours at his computer and can often be found surfing eBay, a Web site that feeds his former auction-going habit.

He keeps his home office orderly. At his fingertips are three-ring binders full of slides of his work organized by series. Above those are binder spines labeled with yellow paper signs: "Jap Hunting Licenses," "Patriotics," "Racist Memorabilia" -- sullen collections that fuel artwork.

Shimomura has a "soft, nostalgic, sentimental, romantic side that nobody sees," says his wife, Janet Davidson-Hues.

But even Shimomura's closest friends say he's hard to know, that he's something of an enigma. Yet he's a magnet.

"I think that he assumes the role of the inscrutable Asian, that he likes to play that role. And I think he realizes that sometimes his presence is intimidating," Lubensky says.

"If there's anything that Roger is, he's somebody that people tend to gravitate toward, even if he seems to be inscrutable. He has some kind of personality that people, even if they're not attracted to it, they're still attracted to it."

Carol Holstead, a KU journalism professor who has known Shimomura for about five years, says, "I don't think it's easy to be Roger."

"First of all, look at the muse that fuels his art. His focus is often his anger or his outrage at the way he and other Japanese-Americans are treated, his outrage at discrimination," she says.
Roger Shimomura, the bespectacled man crouched to the right of the guitar player, hangs out with Kansas University students on campus. The photo was taken in 1970, one year after Shimomura joined the KU art faculty.

Roger Shimomura, the bespectacled man crouched to the right of the guitar player, hangs out with Kansas University students on campus. The photo was taken in 1970, one year after Shimomura joined the KU art faculty.

"You live with that muse. That, to me, wouldn't be the happiest place to inhabit."
More work to do

Undoubtably, anger and frustration drive much of Shimomura's work

His most recent exhibition, "Stereotypes and Admonitions," presents a startling spectrum of paintings based upon instances of racial insensitivity against him or other Asian-Americans. Many of the works cleverly impose on the "victims" the very stereotypes -- yellow skin, buck teeth, demon qualities -- that Shimomura wants to destroy.

A painting about the Cannon Beach incident is part of the series. So is "PassÈ," a piece about an art historian who said Shimomura's idea for a mural that explored whether America would be better thought of as a "melting pot" or a "tossed salad" was "sooo passÈ."

Shimomura's response to that criticism was the same as his reaction when New York Times art critic Holland Cotter wrote a 1999 essay about multiculturalism having worn out its welcome.

"What I do is not based on the kinds of ideas and principles that abstract expressionism or color-field painting or impressionism or any of the ëisms' in art were based upon," Shimomura says.

"Being part of the ëother' is really what motivated me, ultimately, to do what I did. It had nothing to do with what I learned in art school about what was in, out or whatever."

And those who would accuse Shimomura of thriving on the kind of racism that has, in a perverse way, made him a successful artist just don't get it, he says.

"I genuinely understand the kind of pain that it causes. And I think when you start seeing your offspring have offspring, you wish anything that they do not have to experience what it feels like to be marginalized because of the way that you look," he says.

"You just hope to God they don't ever have to experience that. There's nothing wonderful or cute or professionally rewarding or anything about that."

vsoy
Sep 1st, 2006, 10:06 AM
Ok, I take back about the gallery, it has regular hours on Saturday but if you want to see it during the week, make an appointment. Crap, gotta work late today, not sure if I can make it at all. :( I saw Shimomura give a lecture the last time he was in KC and he was a pistol.

GOTTABEES, WANNABEES & GONNABEES

Roger Shimomura

Jan Weiner

4800 Liberty St.

(816) 931-8755

Reception: 5-8 p.m. Friday

Hours: Saturdays and by appointment

On exhibit: Sept. 1-Oct. 30

Lawrence artist and retired University of Kansas professor Roger Shimomura paints flatly colored, heavily outlined images in the style of comic books. This is especially appropriate ó like many comic-book heroes, Shimomura fights against social injustice. His latest series, tall and narrow acrylic self-portraits, represents the artist from within the confines of common stereotypes of Asian-Americans; practicing martial arts, for example. Shimomura will be at the opening.

nskripchun
Sep 1st, 2006, 11:49 AM
I like his art... a friend introduced me to it by buying me a book of his prints, his series "STEREOTYPES AND ADMONITIONS".

A gallery of some of them with commentary:

http://www.gregkucera.com/shimomura_stereotypes.htm

vsoy
Sep 2nd, 2006, 12:36 PM
I actually was able to make it to the opening yesterday and even got a chance to chat a little bit with Roger Shimomura himself! I was a little nervous and didn't get to talk to him as much as I'd like about the specific exhibit on display, but he was pretty darn cool.

Since he retired from teaching at KU (University of Kansas) 2 years ago, he's been real busy painting and giving lectures. He's planning a big exhibit for the Seattle gallery on the Japanese internment soon, so he's heading your way nskripchun. I am so glad that he hasn't retired from painting and traveling, his body of work really is extensive, from several projects on the internment, Lily Wang, A&F, Banzai, and in this exhibit, stereotypes of AM.

We also talked about the different reactions people in NY had versus the reactions people in Seattle had to his exhibit. He talked about how many people in NY didn't pick up on the message in the painting while some in Seattle picked up on the more subtle racist nuances. He felt that it was perhaps due to how people from those areas react to racism. NY as a big melting pot with so many different ethnic groups, someone is bound to shit on somebody, so just let it roll off your back. Whereas in Seattle, he felt people were more likely to make a big stink about subtle racist incidents.

We were also talking about living in the midwest and how that it influenced his art. Had he lived on the coasts, he probably would have not gone in the direction he's gone with his art. I would have liked to talked to him some more about some of the paintings on display because there's a story behind each one that inspired it and so much that is not obvious.

The theme of this exhibit was AM stereotypes and these painting are self portraits. There was one with him in a 3 piece suit as company man, another in a ShaZaam super hero suit, one with him in a cowboy outfit, and another in karate outfit where he's doing a high kick. For the AM/WF fans, there was one with him in traditional Japanese garb/hairdo sucking on a blonde WF tittie (actually his wife) which I thought spoke volumes. There were also 4-5 portraits of him in traditional Japanese garb with some modern props which I didn't quite get. And there was one portrait with him in full Chinese opera singer garb, complete with head dress which I reminded me of, "we all look the same, the cultures all look the same"

I don't go to many art galleries or openings, so maybe I just don't understand how the art scene work, but the one thing that really stuck out in my mind was how many pok gai white people were at this opening. I got there around 5:30/6pm and left a little around 7pm and there was probably one Chinese person who came before me who signed the register in Chinese and one Japanese guy who just came in from Japan visiting KC friends. You had one group of people who came in, took a quick look, went up to Shimomura and said, "Roger, great exhibit!" paid respects and left. Then you had another group of people who stayed and talked about their stuff. I got the feeling all these people knew each other and so this opening was sort of a gathering and paying respects to Shimomura and saying hi.

Granted, people have places to go, people to see, but it just seemed weird people would say stuff like, "I love this painting, your new work" after looking at it for 30 seconds and they are part of the white majority. I realize by making that statement, I'm putting forth a stereotype about white people; assigning racial insensitivity to a white person who may know Roger very well and had to go somewhere. But really, it was just WEIRD that white people would make these comments saying how much they love it. They may "get it" but as an art outsider who don't know these people, it appeared to me that they didn't "get it" and odd that they would like a painting depicting a stereotype. Can you "love" a painting depicting a stereotype if you're Caucasian or if you're Asian? I feel that the painting is powerful but I'm not sure I can say I love it in the same way I love pictures of cute cats. Perhaps it's a semantics, artsy people liberally using the word "love" to describe their reaction to art. Does this make sense?

I overheard part of a conversation between the gallery owner and a customer and it just blew my mind. The gallery owner was very briefly describing a series of small paintings which reflected Shimomura's childhood in the internment camp. The customer bought one of the paintings and noticed the "wire" in the painting. The gallery owner said something like," oh yes, that looks like a wire, like that cattle wire, barbed wire". Now, I missed part of the conversation so it may have been established that the paintings were of the internment camp. The customer may have just noticed the barbed wire in the painting and making the connection but it sure sounded like she bought the painting because it was a painting of a Japanese style house with the sliding rice paper doors with Japanese wooden sandals outside and it was cute. It just seemed to me that the barbed wire was the whole point of the painting, despite this homey, peaceful painting of a house, the barbed wire specter is really an important part of it and it seemed to me that it was overlooked in this conversation.

People buy art because it speaks to them, it strikes some chord in them and over time, they derive new meaning. It just blew my mind because this customer dropped $1000 on a small painting and from what little I heard of the conversation, she didn't really understand an important nuance when she bought it. Maybe she knew it when she decided to buy it, or understood it when she noticed the barbed wire. Rich people in KC love art and their homes so they'll have no problems dropping a bit of money at art fairs and galleries. But geez, for $1000, I'd like to know a little bit more about what I'm buying, but that's just me.

Another conversation I overheard between Shimomura and some artsy person, "I'm so glad you're lightening up [in this exhibit]" I think she was joking with him, but she said it 2 or 3 times. I'm sure he deals with this shit all the time over the past 30+years. I just wondering if folks here had any thoughts on what I touched upon about art and Asian American artists.