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Roger Shimomura | Recent Paintings |
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MINIDOKA ON MY MIND
Click on any image to enlarge: In a group of 30 paintings, Roger Shimomura's exhibition, "Minidoka on My Mind," will explore the artist's family's internment during World War II, including some works suggesting his personal memories. The show's title refers to Camp Minidoka in Hunt, Idaho where he and his family were detained from the spring of 1942 until the summer of 1944. Previous work by Shimomura, has examined the relationship of Japanese Americans to the larger cultural context of the United States. In particular, here, Shimomura explores the racial conflicts of the 1940s war years and the unjust imprisonment of approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans, 60% of whom were U.S. citizens. He says that these "images are scraped from the linings of my mind—not necessarily what I remembered specifically, but what I respond with when I think of Camp Minidoka..." Click on any image to enlarge:
Two very large paintings will anchor the show. AMERICAN INFAMY #2 (6 feet by 10 feet) illustrates the layout of the camp, with an armed guard watching over the barracks and the citizens going about their daily routines. Children are playful, young lovers walk arm in arm, women and men talk in groups but there are also several figures in complete despair—an elderly woman seated with her head down, other figures looking dejectedly outward through the barbed wire, or pacing in a depressed stance. The format for this work, derived from 14th to 15th century Muromachi era byobu screen painting, depicts the action on the ground within the layout of this small city through layers of clouds and a foreshortened perspective.
"This exhibition marks for me the fourth major painting series on the World War II internment experience. It is the culmination of many years of my perusing images culled from books, magazines, government publications, personal recollections, and the internet. The result of this search has been a visual distillation of this experience into tar papered barracks, barbed wire, and desolate landscapes, which are inhabited by muted occupants standing in line to eat, clean, quietly converse, contemplate their fate, and to wait. They appear almost as actors placed within stage sets to live in eternal ennui, or as my grandmother described in one of her wartime diary entries:
Shimomura's latest series of camp paintings portrays the wide array of ages, economic backgrounds, moods, and situations of the interned detainees. There are several works that portray a young boy—playing with a baseball and bat, riding a tricycle, or reading. Another picture shows the artist at his present age peeking through a camp building window at the silhouetted shadow of this same young boy, himself at a younger age. Another work, foretelling the future, shows the artist as a child painting a painting of the barracks wall.
A few paintings illustrate the fashions of the time, while others show the attempts by these captured Japanese Americans to make themselves comfortable within the bleak, arid landscape. Views of a garden built on the site, or of the decoratively curtained windows are poignant reminders that these fellow Americans, uprooted from their own homes, were making every attempt to create comfort in a comfortless environment. The architectural aspects of the simply built barracks play a large role in these paintings. Shimomura shows these rude accommodations with their bare wooden floors and tar papered walls, situated within barbed wire enclosures amid the sandy Idaho terrain. As with other recent work by the artist, the architecture appears, layer upon layer, one material juxtaposed against another, receding into the distance.
In KEEP ON TALKIN'' MICHELLE MALKIN, the American activist who has tried to minimize the concerns of Japanese Americans about the internment, is shown placed inside a camp building, her mouth open in protest.
NIKKEI STORY (8 feet by 12 feet) shows the circumstances of three generations of Japanese Americans in tableaux that are variously humorous, sad, shocking, historically enlightening and encouraging. Roger's own family history is portrayed with imagery of his Issei grandparents in the left panel, his Nisei generation parents at center, and himself, and other Sansei, in the right panel, likely the last generation of Japanese Americans who will have personally experienced life in one of the "relocation" camps.
Other works illustrate contemporary figures. Notably, in NOT A J.A. (Japanese American) Shimomura shows the Japanese baseball player, Ichiro Suzuki, as if he had been interned along with Japanese Americans.
Recent Prints Click on any image to enlarge:
Earlier Paintings, 1995-2001 |
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An American Diary, 1997 |
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