Jun 30, 2022 - Sale 2611

Sale 2611 - Lot 235

Price Realized: $ 1,625
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 1,500 - $ 2,500
YASUO KUNIYOSHI
From the Boardwalk.

Lithograph, 1936. 235x314 mm; 9 1/4x12 1/4 inches, full margins. Edition of 45. Signed, dated and inscribed "45 p" in pencil, lower margin. Printed by George Miller, New York. A very good impression of this scarce lithograph.

Born in Okayama, Japan, Kuniyoshi attended the Los Angeles School of Art and Design before moving to New York to ultimately study at the Art Student's League from 1916-20 (he briefly studied also with Robert Henri at the National Academy). He began to exhibit with the Penguin Club, an informal artists group founded by Walt Kuhn in 1917 to rebel against the stringent National Academy, which counted Guy Pène du Bois, Arthur B. Davies, Edward Hopper, Jules Pascin, Joseph Stella and Max Weber as its affiliated artists. Though short lived, the club was only active until 1920, it sponsored social events, exhibitions, auctions and sketch classes. Kuniyoshi remembered, "This small but fertile group helped establish the roots of contemporary American painting. Considered the rebels of their time, they waged a vigorous battle against conservatism with might and humor. We knew how to play and enjoy ourselves in those days." This humor and playfulness are clearly evident in Kuniyoshi's works, though there is also a sense of political awareness. As in the present work, the appearance of newspapers signifies Kuniyoshi's reaction to contemporary violence and upheavals through the 1940s.

Finding success in New York, Kuniyoshi had his first solo exhibition at the Daniel Gallery and was soon exhibiting internationally in Europe and Japan through the 1930s. He travelled to Mexico in 1935 on a Guggenheim Fellowship and frequently summered in Woodstock, New York. Like several of his contemporaries, Kuniyoshi returned to the Art Students League as a teacher, a position that he would hold from 1933 to his death in 1953. Davis 70.