Namiyo at Hanauma Bay

Date 1985
Technique Lithograph
Price $5,000.00
Exhibitor The Annex Galleries
Contact the Exhibitor 707.546.7352
artannex@aol.com
Buy From / See At This Exhibitor's Site

Namiyo at Hanauma Bay is a 18-color lithograph from 1985 by Masami Teraoka. It is pencil signed and editioned 19/150 on the verso. Namiyo at Hanauma Bay was published by Editions Press, San Francisco, and was printed by Evelyn Lincoln and Brian Shure on Buff Arches Cover paper in an edition of 150 plus 36 proofs. The printers’ chops are in the lower center of the paper. Both image and paper measure 24-7/8 x 35-7/8 inches.

To create this image, Teraoka drew on two litho stones and thirteen aluminum plates and the woodgrain and calligraphy were transferred photographically. Namiyo at Hanauma Bay is a precursor to the Hawaii Snorkel Series from 1993, prints that are a combination of etching, aquatint, and Japanese woodblock technique printed at Tyler Graphics. Tyler wrote: “Teraoka’s work in both paint and print is distinctive for bringing together the precise and contained style of traditional Japanese woodblock prints, or ukiyo-e, with surprising and often humorous elements of contemporary western life and American pop culture.”

Masami Teraoka, painter, printmaker, and lecturer, was born in Onomichi, Hiroshima-ken, Japan in 1936. He graduated in 1959 with a B.A. in aesthetics from Kwansei Gakuin University in Nishinomiya, Japan, and continued his education at Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles receiving his B.F.A. and an M.F.A. degrees in 1968. 

Integrating reality with fantasy, humor with commentary, and history with the present became his working challenge. His early paintings focused on the melding of two vastly different cultures and the transformative influence of American commercialism on an ancient culture. Series such as McDonald's Hamburgers Invading Japan and 31 Flavors Invading Japan were two such themes.  In the 1980s, Teraoka worked in watercolor and lithography creating large scale imagery related to the AIDS epidemic. Since the late 1990s, he has been producing large-scale narrative work addressing social and political issues, especially the abuse of children by priests and other examples of hypocrisy in religious institutions.

Teraoka has been the subject of more than seventy solo exhibitions and he has been honored twice by the American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, and given two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts. His work is represented in more than fifty public collections worldwide, including the Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, Australia; the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, Scotland; the Honolulu Museum of Art, Hawaii; the Tate Modern, London, England; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento; the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the Asian Art Museum, San Francisco; the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.