Skok Olsen

Posted on Dicembre 8, 2008

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Fernando Nieto

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Morgan Navarro

Posted on Novembre 27, 2008

Morgan Navarro Morgan Navarro : http://plutoslo.free.fr/
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Heather Nevay

Posted on Novembre 26, 2008

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Pepijn van den Nieuwendijk

Posted on Novembre 21, 2008

Pepijn van den Nieuwendijk Pepijn van den Nieuwendijk : http://www.cirque.nl/
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Katsuyuki Nagayoshi

Posted on Novembre 17, 2008

Katsuyuki Nagayoshi Katsuyuki Nagayoshi : http://www2u.biglobe.ne.jp/~work/
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Ben Newman

Posted on Novembre 14, 2008

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Christoph Niemann

Posted on Novembre 11, 2008

Christoph Niemann Christoph Niemann : www.christophniemann.com
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Nasosov

Posted on Novembre 8, 2008

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Christian Northeast

Posted on Novembre 5, 2008

Christian Northeast Christian Northeast : www.christiannortheast.com
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Robert Neubecker

Posted on Novembre 4, 2008

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Brian Novatny

Posted on Ottobre 30, 2008

Brian Novatny Brian Novatny : /www.georgebillis.com
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Yoshitomo Nara

Posted on Ottobre 15, 2008

Yoshitomo Nara (奈良 美智 Nara Yoshitomo?, born 1959 in Hirosaki, Japan) is a contemporary Japanese Pop artist. He currently lives and works in Tokyo, though his artwork has been exhibited worldwide. Nara received his B.F.A. (1985) and an M.F.A. (1987) from the Aichi Prefectural University of Fine Arts and Music. Between 1988 and 1993, Nara studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, in Germany. Nara has had nearly 40 solo exhibitions since 1984. He is represented in New York City by Marianne Boesky Gallery and in Los Angeles by Blum & Poe. [1]

Artwork

Nara first came to the fore of the art world during Japan’s Pop art movement in the 1990s. The subject matter of his sculptures and paintings is deceptively simple: most works depict one seemingly innocuous subject (often pastel-hued children and animals drawn with confident, cartoonish lines) with little or no background. But these children, who appear at first to be cute and even vulnerable, sometimes brandish weapons like knives and saws. Their wide eyes often hold accusatory looks that could be sleepy-eyed irritation at being awoken from a nap—or that could be undiluted expressions of hate.

Nara, however, does not see his weapon-wielding subjects as aggressors. “Look at them, they [the weapons] are so small, like toys. Do you think they could fight with those?” he says. “I don’t think so. Rather, I kind of see the children among other, bigger, bad people all around them, who are holding bigger knives…”[2]

Nara’s own explanation of his work, then, casts us as the aggressors guilty of betraying and attacking childhood innocence. When cast in that light, Nara incriminates himself as well, for his art is above all based upon the perversion of otherwise innocent subjects.

Lauded by art critics and hipsters alike, Nara’s bizarrely intriguing works have gained him a cult following around the world.

Light My Fire from 2001

Light My Fire from 2001

Influences

The manga and anime of his 1960s childhood are both clear influences on Nara’s stylized, large-eyed figures. Nara subverts these typically cute images, however, by infusing his works with horror-like imagery. This juxtaposition of human evil with the innocent child may be a reaction to Japan’s rigid social conventions.

The punk rock music of Nara’s youth has also influenced the artist’s work. Recalling a similar – if more unsettling – image of rebellious, violent youth, Nara’s art embraces the punk ethos. That said, Nara has also cited traditions as varied as Renaissance , literature, illustration, and graffiti as further inspiration.

But perhaps most significantly, Nara’s upbringing in post-World War II Japan profoundly affected his mindset and, subsequently, his artwork as well. He grew up in a time when Japan was experiencing an inundation of Western pop culture; comic books, Walt Disney , and Western rock music are just a few examples. Additionally, Nara was raised in the isolated countryside as a latchkey child of working-class parents, so he was often left alone with little to do but explore his young imagination. The fiercely independent subjects that populate so much of his artwork may be a reaction to Nara’s own largely independent childhood.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshitomo_Nara

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