At UB's Anderson Gallery: "Under Each Other's Spell": The Gutai and New York

Influential Japanese art movement and New York avant garde artists of the '50s and '60s

Release Date: April 27, 2010 This content is archived.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. -- An exhibition at the University at Buffalo's Anderson Gallery explores the fruitful relationship between Japan's avant garde Gutari Art Group, founded in 1954 in Osaka, and some of New York's most influential artists of the 1950s and '60s, among them Jackson Pollock, Robert Rauchenberg and Jasper Johns.

"Under Each Other's Spell": The Gutai and New York opened April 10 and will run through Aug. 22 in the gallery, One Martha Jackson Place (off Englewood Avenue between Main Street and Kenmore Avenue), Buffalo.

The exhibition is free and open to the public Wednesday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 1-5 p.m. For information, call 716-829-3754.

The history of the Anderson Gallery and its collections is unusually pertinent to this exhibition. Martha Jackson, mother of David Anderson, was a famous and influential gallerist in New York City until her death in 1969, and in 1958 introduced the Gutai to American audiences in an important exhibition.

Its manifesto defined Gutai as "truth to the material of which art is made" and the lifting of that material to spiritual heights. Group founder Jirô Yoshihara singled out Jackson Pollock and the French painter Georges Mathieu as artists who "grapple with the material in a way which is completely appropriate to it," and encouraged group members to emulate this approach. They promulgated their theories in the journal Gutai, which published 14 issues between 1955 and 1965.

Olsen says the Gutai group was well aware of its distance from the art world's centers, and used the postal system extensively to build its international network. These efforts resulted in their publication of some of Ray Johnson's earliest postal "moticos," and the inclusion of Gutai in artist Allan Kaprow's 1966 book Assemblages, Environments and Happenings.

Yoshihara collected art journals from around the world, and also sent copies of the Gutai journal to artists overseas, including Pollock, who loved them because they shared his vision and reality.

The exhibition draws in particular from the Pollock-Krasner House Collection, the Martha Jackson Archives of the Anderson Gallery, the David Anderson Collection and a group of paintings in the collection of painter Paul Jenkins

In Osaka in 1964, Jenkins was an artist in residence at the Gutai Pinacotheca ("pinacotheca" refers to a picture gallery in either ancient Greece or ancient Rome). The paintings in this exhibition by members of the Gutai group were given to Jenkins in exchange for his own works as an act of friendship. The exhibit takes its name from a comment by Jenkins that during the time he and the Gutai artists spent together, they were "under each other's spell."

The exhibit includes paintings by Gutai members Jirô Yoshihara, Atsuko Tanaka, Shôzô Shimamoto, Sadamasa Motonaga, Kazuo Shiraga and Akira Kanayama. It also features examples of the Gutai journal and other publications, works by New York artists who related strongly to Gutai, rare videos of Gutai exhibitions and performances in Japan and photographs of American artists, including Jenkins, Alice Baber, Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and John Cage visiting the Gutai group in 1964.

It will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, with essays on the interaction between Gutai and New York artists written by guest curator Ming Tiampo, PhD, associate professor of art history at Carleton University, Ottawa, and on Jackson Pollock's relationship to the Gutai group by Tetsuya Oshima, PhD, curator of the Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art in Japan.

The exhibition was organized by the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center in East Hampton, where it was on view July 30 to Oct. 17, 2009, before traveling to the Harold B. Lemmerman Gallery of New Jersey City University and to UB.

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