Japanese Branch by Kaiko Moti

Japanese Branch by Kaiko Moti

Japanese Branch

Kaiko Moti

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

Japanese Branch

 
Artist

Kaiko Moti

  1921 - 1989 (biography)
Year
c. 1970  
Technique
etching and color aquatint 
Image Size
23 3/8 x 18 1/8" platemark 
Signature
pencil, lower right 
Edition Size
10 of 120  
Annotations
pencil editioned 
Reference
 
Paper
soft white wove 
State
published 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
21899 
Price
$1,500.00 
Description

In this color aquatint and etching, the painterly quality that Kaiko Moti became known for is clearly evident in the soft, brush-like textures and the sensitive blending of color. His foray into printmaking in the early 1950s was informed by classical training in painting and drawing, which carried over into the intaglio processes he discovered in 1952 at Atelier 17 in Paris.

Moti would prove to be a pioneer of the metal plate printmaking medium, coaxing delicate, complex imagery from the plate in a way that most 20th century printmakers had not. Though his peers were primarily interested in the uncharted territory of Abstract Expressionism, Moti was inspired by Old Master and Romantic artists that he was first introduced to in his early years at the Bombay School of Fine Arts.

He was especially drawn to the tonality and atmospheric nature of landscapes, and how the mood changed with the light. This image of three branches of red flowers in a glass stein stand out within the modulated background.

Kaiko Moti was born Kaikobad Motiwalla in Bombay, India in 1921. He began private design classes at age fourteen and, between the years 1939 and 1946, he attended the Bombay School of Fine Arts. Moti moved to London, England in 1946 and continued his art studies at the Slade School of Art of the University College, where he received his Masters Degree in painting and sculpture. Additional studies in sculpture and painting took place in the studios of F.E. Macwilliam Reginald Butler.

By 1950 Moti had relocated to France, settling in Paris where he would eventually become a permanent resident. He attended the Academie de la Grand Chaumiere and studied sculpture with Ossip Zadkine at his atelier. However, his discovery of intaglio printmaking in 1952 at Atelier 17, under experimental printmaker Stanley William Hayter, led to a lifelong passion for etching and aquatint. At the workshop he would pioneer many techniques in the field of viscosity printing, developing a painterly tonality on the plate that was greatly informed by Old Master and Romantic painters such as J.M.W. Turner.

Moti began exhibiting in 1953, and showed internationally at the Venice Biennale, the Bibliotheque Nationale, the Basel Art Fair, the Art Expo and the New York Public Library. Moti was an honorary member of the Academy of Florence. Kaiko Moti died in Paris in 1989.

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.