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View Full Version : Gajin Fujita exhibit at Kemper Museum of Contem. Art- KC


vsoy
Aug 27th, 2006, 02:31 PM
Media/style: painting, graffiti, tagging
When: Sept 8-Nov 5, 2006
Where, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO
Museum webpage: http://www.kemperart.org/calendar/default.asp
Exhibit and artist info: http://www.kemperart.org/general/documents/fujita_web_correct_000.pdf
NB: Opening reception Sept 8 from 5:30-7:30pm, artist lecture at 6:30pm

http://www.lalouver.com/resource/gajin_bio/large/LA1.jpg

http://www.lalouver.com/resource/gajin_bio/Fujita_portrait.jpghttp://www.kansascity.com/images/kansascity/kansascitystar/news/AEFA_LABasin_vis_arts_08-27-2006_Q2NG8S4.jpg

articles on Fujita: http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/entertainment/15353645.htm

Posted on Sun, Aug. 27, 2006

L.A. Artistís GROWN-UP GRAFFITI
Gajin Fujitaís paintings draw on his upbringing in East Los Angeles.
By ALICE THORSON
The Kansas City Star
KEN KWOK | SPECIAL TO THE STAR
Artist Gajin Fujitaís exuberant work fuses traditional Japanese imagery with contemporary graffiti, creating a powerful and bold juxtaposition.
KEMPER MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
ìLA Basin,î (2004) reflects Fujitaís love of all things Los Angeles. It will be on display at his Kemper Museum exhibit.

Gajin Fujitaís father opposed his decision to go to art school.

ìHe had his own struggles being an artist,î the 34-year old Fujita said by phone from his studio in Los Angeles. ìHe didnít want his son going through that struggle.î

Fujita, who headlines Kansas Cityís fall art season with a show of his vibrant, graffiti-based paintings at the Kemper Museum, faces a different struggle than what his late father perhaps envisioned.

ìHe has established an international following, and so there is greater demand than there are works available,î said Kimberly Davis, director of the Los Angeles gallery LA Louver, where Fujita has been showing since 2000.

The demand is easy to understand.

These are explosive works in which age-old themes of sex, violence, heroism and conflict get a contemporary urban remake.

The big paintings, executed on multiple panels, can be as wide as 15 feet across. Working on metallic painted backgrounds, Fujita fills them with colorful collisions of spray-painted graffiti tags and streetwise updates of traditional Japanese woodblock prints, including the popular erotic prints known as shunga.

Joining the samurais, courtesans, birds and mythical beasts that inhabit these graffiti-infested scenes are sports team emblems and other symbols that reflect the artistís abiding attachment to the city of L.A.

ìI was born here, raised here. I feel like a Southern California guy,î Fujita said. ìAnytime I travel, I start feeling homesick.î

The son of Japanese parents who immigrated to the U.S. after WWII, Fujita grew up in the mostly Latino neighborhood of Boyle Heights in East Los Angeles.

Gang culture was a part of daily life.

ìI didnít get affiliated with that,î Fujita said. ìThey were more violent. That wasnít my cup of tea. Right after my junior year I participated in the graffiti aspect, which was more hip-hop-oriented. My younger brother and I were really getting into the tagging and bombing in the streets. We thought it was pretty sophisticated and met a bunch of artists who did graffiti around L.A.

ìBeing a graffiti artist doesnít mean that you belong to a gang,î he said. ìYouíre an affiliate of what we call crews.î

After high school Fujita worked various 9-to-5 jobs.

ìThe graffiti part was always in me and stayed with me while I was experiencing society,î he said.

Despite having an artist father and a mother who was a conservator of classical Japanese prints, ìThe fine art part took awhile to develop,î Fujita said. ìI had to educate myself and learn about art history.î

Taking painting and drawing classes at East Los Angeles College solidified Fujitaís decision to become an artist. He enrolled at the Otis Art Institute in Westchester, Calif., where he developed the panel-based format that marked his shift from street artist to fine artist. In grad school he came up with the idea of painting on gold leaf.

ìWhen I traveled to Japan and saw some of these panels painted with gold leaf, I thought, ëWho would be ballsy enough to tag on something like that?í î

The earliest works in the Kemper show date from 1999, a year before Fujita completed his masterís of fine arts from the University of Nevada. One of his teachers was influential art critic and theorist Dave Hickey.

The young artistís career skyrocketed when Hickey included him in the landmark 2001 Site Santa Fe biennial. Fujitaís contribution included a huge graffiti mural on the outside of the Site Santa Fe building, where it received major play as one of the emblematic works of the exhibit.

The Kemper showing marks only Fujitaís second one-person show at a museum, following a 2005 exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

In her essay for the exhibit catalog, curator Elizabeth Dunbar describes Fujita as ìa zephyr, gaining strength and velocity by assimilating all the elements in his path ó from Tokyo to California to Las Vegas.î

Ideas, attitudes and images from all of these places animate the 29 works at the Kemper, which include the recent acquisition ìRide or Dieî (2005), a 9-foot-long painting of a samurai warrior on horseback charging through a swarm of flying arrows in a graffiti-ridden landscape.

Its mix of high and low, beautiful and grotesque, past and present, East and West is typical Fujita.

And check out the guyís helmet ó heís a Dodger fan.
On exhibit

The show: ìZephyr: Paintings by Gajin Fujitaî

Where: Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, 4420 Warwick Blvd.

When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday; 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday-Saturday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Closed Mondays. The exhibit continues through Nov. 5.

How much: Free


For more information: (816) 753-5784 or kemperart.org

Opening reception: 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Sept. 8, with an artist talk at 6:30 p.m.

nekohead
Aug 28th, 2006, 07:00 PM
???
You sure post alot of K.C items.
I just realized that you are where I am from, I think.
Have you ever been to XO's in Westport before they closed?
I used to hang their whenever I came back to the USA. I would be the drunk girl that would be kissing on some random HOT white guy :lol: .

vsoy
Aug 29th, 2006, 11:52 AM
When you introduced yourself being from KCMO, I mentioned I'm living in the area for the past 5 years now.
http://www.thefighting44s.com/discussion/viewtopic.php?t=6180&highlight=
I'm not much of clubgirl so I haven't spent much time at Westport, let alone XO.

nekohead
Aug 29th, 2006, 01:16 PM
:oops:

I forgot.."

I only remember what SB1 wrote or CattyGirl..."
I have to update myself and reread some OLD threads..."

vsoy
Sep 9th, 2006, 01:23 AM
I was able to catch Gajin Fujita's talk at his opening at Kemper today. This is actually his first solo exhibit, he's done a bunch of two artist shows but no solos until now.

Geez, it's like Asian American art bonaza in KC lately. If there were only more Asians showing up at these things, it is really weird to see a practically all white audience. Today, I saw more than one Asian person, maybe a handful, including an older Japanese woman (maybe in her 70's?) which I thought was pretty cool- Grandma's into tagging!

The internet pics do not do justice to Gajin's art. The colors, the layering, references to LA and soCal, his tagging crew, all together make his paintings rich and vibrant. He uses a lot of stencils and spraypaint and the gold leaf is just decadent. He'll often use logos or fonts from sport teams like the Dodgers, Golden State Warriors or even Hot Wheels car toys in his paintings. There was one slide from his talk that was a commissioned work by this German company that was hysterical. He had a big old pic of the St. Pauli girl with her boob hanging out and a samurai (representing him) oogling her. I couldn't really get a feel for what Fujita was like, except really calm and quiet, but I did get a sense that he liked things that were subversive. Duh, tagging?

There was only time for a few questions and the pok gai stupid white folks were asking the dumbest questions. If there's only a few minutes, you don't ask stupid ass questions like, "Are you still part of a gang?" Dumbass, a tagging crew is not a street gang selling crack. An African American guy asked if Gajin's former crew mates thought he had sold out with his success and he replied while they might be envious, they didn't say, but his former crew mates supported him. I think on some of his works, he had some crewmates "guest tag"(?).