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Yasuo Kuniyoshi

Yasuo Kuniyoshi (国吉 康雄, Kuniyoshi Yasuo, September 1, 1889 – May 14, 1953) was a Japanese-American painter, photographer and printmaker.[3]

Yasuo Kuniyoshi
Yasuo Kuniyoshi from the Archives of American Art
Born(1889-09-01)September 1, 1889
Okayama, Japan
DiedMay 14, 1953(1953-05-14) (aged 63)
New York City
NationalityJapanese[1]
EducationLos Angeles School of Art and Design, Art Students League of New York
Known forPainting, Intaglio printmaking, lithography
Spouse(s)Katharine Schmidt (divorced 1932)
Sara Mazo (married 1935)[2]
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship
Kuniyoshi working on his painting "Upside Down Table and Mask" in his studio near Union Square at 30 East Fourteenth Street in New York City

Biography

Kuniyoshi was born on September 1, 1889 in Okayama, Japan.[4] He immigrated to the United States in 1906, choosing not to attend military school in Japan.[5] Kuniyoshi originally intended to study English and return to Japan to work as a translator. He spent some time in Seattle, before enrolling at the Los Angeles School of Art and Design.[6] Kuniyoshi spent three years in Los Angeles, discovering his love for the arts. He then moved to New York City to pursue an art career. Kuniyoshi studied briefly at the National Academy and at the Independent School in New York City, and then studied under Kenneth Hayes Miller at the Art Students League of New York.[6] He married his first wife Katherine Schmidt,[7] who in 1919 lost her American citizenship due to her relationship with Kuniyoshi who was ineligible for American citizenship. He later taught at the Art Students League of New York in New York City and in Woodstock, New York. Nan Lurie was among his students,[8] as was Irene Krugman.[9] Around 1930, the artist built a home and studio on Ohayo Mountain Road in Woodstock. He was an active member of the artistic community there for the rest of his life.[10] One of his pupils from the League, Anne Helioff, would go on to work with him at Woodstock.[11]

Although viewed as an immigrant, Kuniyoshi was very patriotic and identified himself as an American. He never received his citizenship due to harsh immigration laws.[1] During World War II, he proclaimed his loyalty and patriotism as a propaganda artist for the United States. This included a number of anti-Japanese propaganda posters.[12]

In 1935, Kuniyoshi was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship.[3][13] He was also an Honorary member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and first president of Artists Equity Association, now known as New York Artists Equity Association.[14][15]

In 1948, Kuniyoshi became the first living artist chosen to have a retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[16]

In 1952, Kuniyoshi also exhibited at the Venice Biennial.[1]

In the early 1950s, Kuniyoshi became sick with cancer,[7] and ended his career as an artist with a series of black-and-white drawings using sumi-e ink.[citation needed] He died on 14 May 1953.[4] He is interred at the Woodstock Artists Cemetery in Woodstock, New York.[17]

Art

Printmaking

Kenneth Hayes Miller introduced Kuniyoshi to intaglio printmaking; he made approximately 45 such prints between 1916 and 1918.[6] One of Kuniyoshi's more popular Intaglio prints is "Bust of a Woman, Head Inclined to the Right," which can be found in the collections of both The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art.

In 1922, Kuniyoshi learned about zinc plate lithography and adopted the technique.[18] Kuniyoshi continued making lithographs throughout the remainder of his artistic career.

Painting

 
Strong Woman and Child (1925), Smithsonian American Art Museum

Kuniyoshi was also known for his still-life paintings of common objects, and figurative subjects like female circus performers and nudes. Throughout Kuniyoshi's career he had frequent changes in his technique and subject matter. In the 1920s, Kuniyoshi painted images that were more angular, somewhat Cubist in style and with a tilted plane that allowed him to paint the most detail for each object in his paintings. Kuniyoshi's application of Cubism's angularity can be seen in his painting titled Little Joe with Cow (1923). In these early paintings, Kuniyoshi was painting from a combination of his memory and imagination, which is a Japanese mode of thinking about painting. Instead of painting from life, as in Western painting, traditional Japanese painters typically paint their ideal image of a particular subject. Kuniyoshi combined this with Western painting in the way he applies the bold colors in oil on canvas;[19] in Japan, traditional painters use ink on either silk or rice paper. These early paintings are the precursors to his mature style that we see in the 1930s.[20]

In 1925, Kuniyoshi painted his Circus Girl Resting, after a visit to Paris. He painted a provocative woman of larger proportions, similar to Strong Woman and Child. This painting was purchased and included in the Advancing American Art Exhibition by the US Department of State alongside other well known modern artists such as Georgia O'Keeffe and Edward Hopper. Due to that era's aversion to modern art, it was closed down. Kuniyoshi's Circus Girl Resting received harsh criticism from President Harry Truman because of its exotic proportions, not because of its provocative nature.[21]

 
Dream (1922), Bridgestone Museum of Art, Tokyo

In the 1930s Kuniyoshi switched from painting from memory to painting from life. This change occurred after his two trips to Europe in 1925 and 1928, where he was exposed to French modern art. In 1928, Goodrich notes, Kuniyoshi spent most of his time in Paris with his friend Jules Pascin, and it was on this later trip that Kuniyoshi realized that his art had grown stale.[22] By switching to painting from life and incorporating perspective into his paintings, he was able to breathe life back into his images; the change in his style can be seen in Daily News (1935). In this painting it appears that the woman, who is seated in a chair, occupies space within the room depicted as opposed to appearing flat as in Little Joe with Cow. The sharp angles in the cow painting are gone in his painting of the woman, but the soft line work and bold use of colors are apparent in both images.[citation needed] His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.[23]

Kuniyoshi's "Artificial Flowers and Other Things" appeared in the Whitney Museum's "Second Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting," which ran from November 27, 1934, to January 10, 1935, and included the work of one other Japanese-American artist, Hideo Noda.[24]

Even in his images of women where they are full-bodied and seem to have a presence in the painting, such as the woman in Daily News, Kuniyoshi did not entirely throw out painting from memory. Goodrich points out that Kuniyoshi did not work with models for the entire painting process. Rather, the artist drew from the model in the early stages of a painting but eventually stopped using her after about a week or so, and then would continue on from his memory, making adjustments as he saw fit.[25] This desire to paint the ideal perfection of a subject was favored in Japanese art, whereas in Western traditions the painting is typically informed by the real object throughout the entire painting process.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Kantrowitz, Jonathan (April 8, 2015). "Art History News: "The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi" Smithsonian American Art Museum April 3 through Aug. 30". Art History News. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  2. ^ "Yasuo Kuniyoshi papers, 1906-2013". ARCHIVES OF AMERICAN ART.
  3. ^ a b Fielding, Mantle (1983). "Kuniyoshi, Yasuo". In Glenn B. Opitz (ed.). Dictionary of American Painters, Sculptors & Engravers. Apollo. p. 536. ISBN 0-938290-02-9.
  4. ^ a b Niiya, Brian (2001). Barkan, Elliott Robert (ed.). Making it in America: A Sourcebook on Eminent Ethnic Americans. ABC-CLIO. pp. 185–86. ISBN 9781576070987.
  5. ^ Tatham (2006), p.99
  6. ^ a b c Tatham (2006), p.100
  7. ^ a b Chang, Gordon H.; Johnson, Mark Dean; Karlstrom, Paul J.; Spain, Sharon (2008). Asian American art, a history 1850-1970. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804757522. OCLC 184925464.
  8. ^ Ryley, Robert M. "Kenneth Fearing's Life". Modern American Poetry. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  9. ^ Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller (December 19, 2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5.
  10. ^ Bloodgood, Josephine, At Woodstock, Kuniyoshi (Woodstock, NY: Woodstock Artists Association, 2003), pp.10-29.
  11. ^ "Anne Helioff – Artist, Fine Art Prices, Auction Records for Anne Helioff". Askart.com. Retrieved February 25, 2017.
  12. ^ "The Anxious Art Of Japanese Painter (And 'Enemy Alien') Yasuo Kuniyoshi". NPR.org. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  13. ^ . www.gf.org. Archived from the original on June 3, 2013.
  14. ^ "History". New York Artists Equity Association. Retrieved March 4, 2019.
  15. ^ Sokol, David M. "The Founding of Artists Equity Association after World War II." Archives of American Art Journal 39, no. 1/2 (1999): 17-29. JSTOR 1557867
  16. ^ Catlin, Roger (May 14, 2015). "Meet the Iconic Japanese-American Artist Whose Work Hasn't Been Exhibited in Decades". Smithsonian.
  17. ^ "Home". artistcemetery. Retrieved January 16, 2022.
  18. ^ Tatham (2006), p.100-102
  19. ^ Wolf, Tom. Yasuo Kuniyoshi's Women. Whitney Museum of American Art, 1948. VI-VII.
  20. ^ Goodall, Donald B. (1975). "Introduction". Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889–1953: A Retrospective Exhibition. pp. 27–32.
  21. ^ ""Circus Girl Resting" by Yasuo Kuniyoshi - The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi / Smithsonian American Art Museum". 2.americanart.si.edu. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  22. ^ Goodrich, Lloyd. Yasuo Kuniyoshi: Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9, 1948. Pomegranate Artbooks, 1993. 25–26.
  23. ^ "Yasuo Kuniyoshi". Olympedia. Retrieved August 4, 2020.
  24. ^ Second Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art. 1934. p. 8 (item # 27).
  25. ^ Goodrich. Yasuo Kuniyoshi: Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9, 1948. 32–34.

References

  • Goodall, Donald B. (1975). "Introduction". Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889–1953: A Retrospective Exhibition. Austin, TX: The University of Texas at Austin. pp. 17–42.
  • Goodrich, Lloyd (1948). Yasuo Kuniyoshi: Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9, 1948. New York, NY: Whitney Museum of American Art.
  • Tatham, David (2006). "Drawn to Stone: The Early Lithographs of Yasuo Kuniyoshi". North American prints, 1913–1947: an examination at century's end. Syracuse University Press.
  • Wolf, Tom (1993). Yasuo Kuniyoshi's Women. San Francisco, CA: Pomegranate Artbooks.

Bibliography

  • Goodrich, Lloyd (1969). "Introduction". A Special Loan Retrospective Exhibition of Works by Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1893–1953. Gainesville, FL: University Gallery, University of Florida.
  • Riehlman, Franklin; Wolf, Tom (1983). Yasuo Kuniyoshi: artist as photographer. Annandale-on-Hudson, NY: Edith C. Blum Art Institute, The Bard College Center.
  • Wolf, Tom (2008). "The Tip of the Iceberg: Early Asian American Artists in New York". Asian Art: A History, 1850–1970. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 83–109.
  • Wang, ShiPu (2011). Becoming American: The Art and Identity Crisis of Yasuo Kuniyoshi. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i.
  • Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889–1953: A Retrospective Exhibition. Austin Texas: The University of Texas at Austin. 1975.
  • Becoming American?: Asian Identity Negotiated Through the Art of Yasuo Kuniyoshi By Shi-Pu Wang

External links

  • "The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Smithsonian American Art Museum DC, April 2 - August 29 2015". Online Exhibition
  • "Wang/Becoming American?" (PDF). University of Hawai'i Press. 2011.
  • Yasuo Kuniyoshi" (Densho Encyclopedia). Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  • "Between Two Worlds: Folk Culture, Identity, and the American Art of Yasuo Kuniyoshi" (PDF). Baruch College.
  • "Yasuo Kuniyoshi papers, 1906-2013". ARCHIVES OF AMERICAN ART.
  • Artist Teacher Organizer: Yasuo Kuniyoshi in the Archives of American Art
  • Kuniyoshi Yasuo Museum, Okayama (in Japanese)
  • Conti, Andrew. at the Wayback Machine (archived October 12, 2007). In Metropolis; Japan Today, as archived by archive.org on October 12, 2007.
  • Union List of Artist Names, s.v. "Kuniyoshi, Yasuo", cited June 2, 2006
  • Maine Family print [1] Phillips Collection, Washington, DC
  • Thinking Ahead print [2] Phillips Collection, Washington, DC

yasuo, kuniyoshi, 国吉, 康雄, kuniyoshi, yasuo, september, 1889, 1953, japanese, american, painter, photographer, printmaker, from, archives, american, artborn, 1889, september, 1889okayama, japandiedmay, 1953, 1953, aged, york, citynationalityjapanese, educationl. Yasuo Kuniyoshi 国吉 康雄 Kuniyoshi Yasuo September 1 1889 May 14 1953 was a Japanese American painter photographer and printmaker 3 Yasuo KuniyoshiYasuo Kuniyoshi from the Archives of American ArtBorn 1889 09 01 September 1 1889Okayama JapanDiedMay 14 1953 1953 05 14 aged 63 New York CityNationalityJapanese 1 EducationLos Angeles School of Art and Design Art Students League of New YorkKnown forPainting Intaglio printmaking lithographySpouse s Katharine Schmidt divorced 1932 Sara Mazo married 1935 2 AwardsGuggenheim FellowshipKuniyoshi working on his painting Upside Down Table and Mask in his studio near Union Square at 30 East Fourteenth Street in New York City Contents 1 Biography 2 Art 2 1 Printmaking 2 2 Painting 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBiography EditKuniyoshi was born on September 1 1889 in Okayama Japan 4 He immigrated to the United States in 1906 choosing not to attend military school in Japan 5 Kuniyoshi originally intended to study English and return to Japan to work as a translator He spent some time in Seattle before enrolling at the Los Angeles School of Art and Design 6 Kuniyoshi spent three years in Los Angeles discovering his love for the arts He then moved to New York City to pursue an art career Kuniyoshi studied briefly at the National Academy and at the Independent School in New York City and then studied under Kenneth Hayes Miller at the Art Students League of New York 6 He married his first wife Katherine Schmidt 7 who in 1919 lost her American citizenship due to her relationship with Kuniyoshi who was ineligible for American citizenship He later taught at the Art Students League of New York in New York City and in Woodstock New York Nan Lurie was among his students 8 as was Irene Krugman 9 Around 1930 the artist built a home and studio on Ohayo Mountain Road in Woodstock He was an active member of the artistic community there for the rest of his life 10 One of his pupils from the League Anne Helioff would go on to work with him at Woodstock 11 Although viewed as an immigrant Kuniyoshi was very patriotic and identified himself as an American He never received his citizenship due to harsh immigration laws 1 During World War II he proclaimed his loyalty and patriotism as a propaganda artist for the United States This included a number of anti Japanese propaganda posters 12 In 1935 Kuniyoshi was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship 3 13 He was also an Honorary member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters and first president of Artists Equity Association now known as New York Artists Equity Association 14 15 In 1948 Kuniyoshi became the first living artist chosen to have a retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art 16 In 1952 Kuniyoshi also exhibited at the Venice Biennial 1 In the early 1950s Kuniyoshi became sick with cancer 7 and ended his career as an artist with a series of black and white drawings using sumi e ink citation needed He died on 14 May 1953 4 He is interred at the Woodstock Artists Cemetery in Woodstock New York 17 Art EditPrintmaking Edit Kenneth Hayes Miller introduced Kuniyoshi to intaglio printmaking he made approximately 45 such prints between 1916 and 1918 6 One of Kuniyoshi s more popular Intaglio prints is Bust of a Woman Head Inclined to the Right which can be found in the collections of both The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art In 1922 Kuniyoshi learned about zinc plate lithography and adopted the technique 18 Kuniyoshi continued making lithographs throughout the remainder of his artistic career Painting Edit Strong Woman and Child 1925 Smithsonian American Art Museum Kuniyoshi was also known for his still life paintings of common objects and figurative subjects like female circus performers and nudes Throughout Kuniyoshi s career he had frequent changes in his technique and subject matter In the 1920s Kuniyoshi painted images that were more angular somewhat Cubist in style and with a tilted plane that allowed him to paint the most detail for each object in his paintings Kuniyoshi s application of Cubism s angularity can be seen in his painting titled Little Joe with Cow 1923 In these early paintings Kuniyoshi was painting from a combination of his memory and imagination which is a Japanese mode of thinking about painting Instead of painting from life as in Western painting traditional Japanese painters typically paint their ideal image of a particular subject Kuniyoshi combined this with Western painting in the way he applies the bold colors in oil on canvas 19 in Japan traditional painters use ink on either silk or rice paper These early paintings are the precursors to his mature style that we see in the 1930s 20 In 1925 Kuniyoshi painted his Circus Girl Resting after a visit to Paris He painted a provocative woman of larger proportions similar to Strong Woman and Child This painting was purchased and included in the Advancing American Art Exhibition by the US Department of State alongside other well known modern artists such as Georgia O Keeffe and Edward Hopper Due to that era s aversion to modern art it was closed down Kuniyoshi s Circus Girl Resting received harsh criticism from President Harry Truman because of its exotic proportions not because of its provocative nature 21 Dream 1922 Bridgestone Museum of Art Tokyo In the 1930s Kuniyoshi switched from painting from memory to painting from life This change occurred after his two trips to Europe in 1925 and 1928 where he was exposed to French modern art In 1928 Goodrich notes Kuniyoshi spent most of his time in Paris with his friend Jules Pascin and it was on this later trip that Kuniyoshi realized that his art had grown stale 22 By switching to painting from life and incorporating perspective into his paintings he was able to breathe life back into his images the change in his style can be seen in Daily News 1935 In this painting it appears that the woman who is seated in a chair occupies space within the room depicted as opposed to appearing flat as in Little Joe with Cow The sharp angles in the cow painting are gone in his painting of the woman but the soft line work and bold use of colors are apparent in both images citation needed His work was also part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics 23 Kuniyoshi s Artificial Flowers and Other Things appeared in the Whitney Museum s Second Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting which ran from November 27 1934 to January 10 1935 and included the work of one other Japanese American artist Hideo Noda 24 Even in his images of women where they are full bodied and seem to have a presence in the painting such as the woman in Daily News Kuniyoshi did not entirely throw out painting from memory Goodrich points out that Kuniyoshi did not work with models for the entire painting process Rather the artist drew from the model in the early stages of a painting but eventually stopped using her after about a week or so and then would continue on from his memory making adjustments as he saw fit 25 This desire to paint the ideal perfection of a subject was favored in Japanese art whereas in Western traditions the painting is typically informed by the real object throughout the entire painting process citation needed See also EditJapanese American Committee for Democracy Japanese resistance to the Empire of Japan 1937 1945 Notes Edit a b c Kantrowitz Jonathan April 8 2015 Art History News The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi Smithsonian American Art Museum April 3 through Aug 30 Art History News Retrieved December 13 2017 Yasuo Kuniyoshi papers 1906 2013 ARCHIVES OF AMERICAN ART a b Fielding Mantle 1983 Kuniyoshi Yasuo In Glenn B Opitz ed Dictionary of American Painters Sculptors amp Engravers Apollo p 536 ISBN 0 938290 02 9 a b Niiya Brian 2001 Barkan Elliott Robert ed Making it in America A Sourcebook on Eminent Ethnic Americans ABC CLIO pp 185 86 ISBN 9781576070987 Tatham 2006 p 99 a b c Tatham 2006 p 100 a b Chang Gordon H Johnson Mark Dean Karlstrom Paul J Spain Sharon 2008 Asian American art a history 1850 1970 Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804757522 OCLC 184925464 Ryley Robert M Kenneth Fearing s Life Modern American Poetry Retrieved November 1 2014 Jules Heller Nancy G Heller December 19 2013 North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century A Biographical Dictionary Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 63882 5 Bloodgood Josephine At Woodstock Kuniyoshi Woodstock NY Woodstock Artists Association 2003 pp 10 29 Anne Helioff Artist Fine Art Prices Auction Records for Anne Helioff Askart com Retrieved February 25 2017 The Anxious Art Of Japanese Painter And Enemy Alien Yasuo Kuniyoshi NPR org Retrieved December 13 2017 Yasuo Kuniyoshi John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation www gf org Archived from the original on June 3 2013 History New York Artists Equity Association Retrieved March 4 2019 Sokol David M The Founding of Artists Equity Association after World War II Archives of American Art Journal 39 no 1 2 1999 17 29 JSTOR 1557867 Catlin Roger May 14 2015 Meet the Iconic Japanese American Artist Whose Work Hasn t Been Exhibited in Decades Smithsonian Home artistcemetery Retrieved January 16 2022 Tatham 2006 p 100 102 Wolf Tom Yasuo Kuniyoshi s Women Whitney Museum of American Art 1948 VI VII Goodall Donald B 1975 Introduction Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889 1953 A Retrospective Exhibition pp 27 32 Circus Girl Resting by Yasuo Kuniyoshi The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi Smithsonian American Art Museum 2 americanart si edu Retrieved December 13 2017 Goodrich Lloyd Yasuo Kuniyoshi Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9 1948 Pomegranate Artbooks 1993 25 26 Yasuo Kuniyoshi Olympedia Retrieved August 4 2020 Second Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting New York Whitney Museum of American Art 1934 p 8 item 27 Goodrich Yasuo Kuniyoshi Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9 1948 32 34 References EditGoodall Donald B 1975 Introduction Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889 1953 A Retrospective Exhibition Austin TX The University of Texas at Austin pp 17 42 Goodrich Lloyd 1948 Yasuo Kuniyoshi Retrospective Exhibition March 27 to May 9 1948 New York NY Whitney Museum of American Art Tatham David 2006 Drawn to Stone The Early Lithographs of Yasuo Kuniyoshi North American prints 1913 1947 an examination at century s end Syracuse University Press Wolf Tom 1993 Yasuo Kuniyoshi s Women San Francisco CA Pomegranate Artbooks Bibliography EditGoodrich Lloyd 1969 Introduction A Special Loan Retrospective Exhibition of Works by Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1893 1953 Gainesville FL University Gallery University of Florida Riehlman Franklin Wolf Tom 1983 Yasuo Kuniyoshi artist as photographer Annandale on Hudson NY Edith C Blum Art Institute The Bard College Center Wolf Tom 2008 The Tip of the Iceberg Early Asian American Artists in New York Asian Art A History 1850 1970 Stanford CA Stanford University Press pp 83 109 Wang ShiPu 2011 Becoming American The Art and Identity Crisis of Yasuo Kuniyoshi Honolulu HI University of Hawai i Yasuo Kuniyoshi 1889 1953 A Retrospective Exhibition Austin Texas The University of Texas at Austin 1975 Becoming American Asian Identity Negotiated Through the Art of Yasuo Kuniyoshi By Shi Pu WangExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yasuo Kuniyoshi The Artistic Journey of Yasuo Kuniyoshi Smithsonian American Art Museum DC April 2 August 29 2015 Online Exhibition Wang Becoming American PDF University of Hawai i Press 2011 Yasuo Kuniyoshi Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved October 29 2014 Between Two Worlds Folk Culture Identity and the American Art of Yasuo Kuniyoshi PDF Baruch College Yasuo Kuniyoshi papers 1906 2013 ARCHIVES OF AMERICAN ART Artist Teacher Organizer Yasuo Kuniyoshi in the Archives of American Art Yasuo Kuniyoshi papers online at the Smithsonian Archives of American Art Kuniyoshi Yasuo Museum Okayama in Japanese Conti Andrew Yasuo Kuniyoshi Between Two Worlds at the Wayback Machine archived October 12 2007 In Metropolis Japan Today as archived by archive org on October 12 2007 Union List of Artist Names s v Kuniyoshi Yasuo cited June 2 2006 Maine Family print 1 Phillips Collection Washington DC Thinking Ahead print 2 Phillips Collection Washington DC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yasuo Kuniyoshi amp oldid 1118804025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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