Masao Yoshida

Japanese (1934–1998)

About the artist:

Masao Yoshida was born in Tsuchiura-Shi, Ibargi Japan in 1934. In 1956 he won the Nika-kai Prize for New Talent and the Nika Prize in 1957 and 1960. He left Japan for Europe and worked in Paris at Stanley William Hayter’s Atelier 17 between 1961 and 1963 where he studied intaglio printing. There he learned intaglio printmaking and was introduced to the Atelier 17 surrealist abstraction. Yoshida quickly adopted this style and used rich colors to create compositions that seem to be built from psychedelic cellular forms. He exhibited with the Atelier in New York, Copenhagen, Rome and Tokyo.

Frances Blakemore, author of the book Who's Who in Modern Japanese Prints, wrote this about Masao Yoshida’s work: “Fertile imaginations often express themselves in a combination of realism and fantasy. The artist’s skill in this is exhibited by his ability to compel logic to the point of absurdity, to be simultaneously original and mysterious, sophisticated and homely. …The artist’s skill is seen above all in his painstaking use of color to heighten the fantastic effect.”

Masao Yoshida

Japanese (1934–1998)

(1 works)

About the artist:

Masao Yoshida was born in Tsuchiura-Shi, Ibargi Japan in 1934. In 1956 he won the Nika-kai Prize for New Talent and the Nika Prize in 1957 and 1960. He left Japan for Europe and worked in Paris at Stanley William Hayter’s Atelier 17 between

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