Evening at Carl Inn, (Yosemite - From the World Landscape Series - American) by Chiura Obata

Evening at Carl Inn, (Yosemite - From the World Landscape Series - American) by Chiura Obata

Evening at Carl Inn, (Yosemite - From the World Landscape Series - American)

Chiura Obata

Title

Evening at Carl Inn, (Yosemite - From the World Landscape Series - American)

 
Artist

Chiura Obata

  1885 - 1975 (biography)
Year
1930  
Technique
color woodcut (requiring 130 impressions from the blocks) 
Image Size
15 9/16 x 10 7/8" image 
Signature
brush, lower left; red seal, lower left 
Edition Size
100 (many destroyed) 
Annotations
dated 1930, lower left image 
Reference
World Landscape Series #6; illustrated on page 124 in Obata's Yosemite 
Paper
Japanese Kozo 
State
published 
Publisher
artist and Takimazawa 
Inventory ID
CAAL110 
Price
SOLD
Description

"Evening at Carl Inn" required over 130 impressions from the blocks. The printing was done in Japan by the artist working with the Takimazawa Color-Print Studio. Though done in an edition of 50 they are exceedingly rare, half the edition stayed in Japan and the rest came to the united States where many were destroyed during WWII when having "Japanese" art was considered by many to be unpatriotic.

Chiura Obata was born in 1885 in Okayama prefecture, Japan. At the age of 14 he went to Tokyo where he studied with Tanryo Murata, Kogyo Terasaki and Goho Hasimoto. In 1903 he moved to San Francisco. While working as an illustrator for the city's Japanese newspapers The New World and the Japanese American, Obata made on-site sketches of the San Francisco earthquake. He married Haruki Kohashi in 1912, and from 1915 to 1927 worked as an illustrator for Japan Magazine. He spent much of the 20's painting landscapes throughout California and helped establish the East West Art Society in San Francisco in 1921. Spent the summer of 1927 on a sketching tour of Yosemite and the Sierra high country producing over 100 new paintings. In 1928 Obata returned to Japan, following his father's death. While there, he supervised the production of 35 colored woodblock prints of California landscapes for his World Landscape Series. They were exhibited at the "Eighty-Seventh Annual Exhibition" at Ueno Park, Tokyo; Lake Basin in the High Sierra won first prize.

In 1932 Obata was appointed as an instructor in the Art Department at the University of California, Berkeley. Between 1930 and 1941, One-man exhibitions were held in numerous locations. In April 1942, Obata was interned at the Tanforan detention center where, during his stay, he organized an art school with over 650 camp residents as students. In September 1942, he was moved to the Topez Relocation Center, Topez, Utah. Released from Topaz in 1943, he moved with his family to St Louis, finding employment with a commercial art company.

In 1945, when the military exclusion ban was lifted, Obata was reinstated as an instructor at U.C. Berkeley. He was promoted to Associate Professor of Art in 1948. One-Man shows continued, as did his sketching and painting trips in the high country, often with the Sierra Club. In 1954 he became a naturalized citizen and retired as Professor Emeritus from U.C. Berkeley. From 1955 to 1970 he traveled throughout California giving lectures and demonstrations on Japanese brush painting. In 1965 he received the Order of the Sacred Treasure, 5th Class, Emperor's Award, for promoting good will and cultural understanding between the United States and Japan. He died in 1975, aged 90.

Posthumous exhibitions of Chiura Obata's works have been organized at the Oakland Museum, The Smithsonian Institution and most recently at the M.H. de Young Museum in San Francisco, in 2000. Obata is included in an episode of Ken Burns' "The National Parks: America's Best Idea"