Yoshitaka Amano at New People S.F.


The show might be not-so-current news at this point, as I just got to see it on its last day this Saturday, but the work is just too good not to be shared.  I had the pleasure of making it to the Yoshitaka Amano: FOR JAPAN exhibit and auction just in time.  I attribute part of my hesitation to the promotional materials for the show which featured his signature black and white character design but in the end it was probably just neglect on my part.  Nevertheless, while I still enjoy the black and white body of his work it's something that we've all seen time and time again from Amano.


You can imagine my surprise when I walked into New People's FROG Gallery and saw these amazing large scale color portraits.  Some of these are of Amano's characters from Gatchaman but many were something I had not seen before from him.  The exception being one piece on permanent display in the New People lobby which I realize came from a similar show in the past.

Photo courtesy of Iris Chen

The green portrait at the top of this post has grown to be my favorite of them all for some reason.  There is a definite strength in his female characters.  They are powerful, sensual, and often, as a friend of mine put it, coquettish.  Yet there is also something unsettling about them, made obvious in some pieces where the eyes were deliberately crossed or skewed, that can leave me feeling tenuous and uneasy.  It lends these girls an initial appearance of beauty but makes them somewhat grotesque on closer inspection.


The fact that these qualities are present in Amano's work is a sure sign that he has at last joined the ranks of the Superflat movement.  The two pieces above are especially reminiscient of some Murakami works, albeit executed in Amano's own style.  I never thought of Amano as a Superflat artist based on his previous concept and illustration art.  This is a welcome evolution of my perception of him to be sure.


Of particular interest to me here is how Amano executed these paintings.  While I cannot be entirely sure without further research I believe to have determined his method.  All of these pieces are around five inches in depth off the wall and have a completely smooth gloss finish.  This seemed to be curious given that the edges were a bit too perfect to be done by hand.  The painting treatment itself looked as if it were done in cell vinyl paint.


Given Amano's background in the anime industry, this would make sense.  So my theory, for what it's worth, is that these are all made in prefabricated plexiglass boxes which were painted using animation cell vinyl paint from the inside.  It's a brilliant idea and one that I have thought about myself without knowing how to execute it exactly.  I was always curious about what cell art would look like on a large scale, presented as fine art.  And here we are.  Much better than what I could have probably come up with.


If you didn't get to see Amano's work in this exhibit, there should still be that piece in New People's lobby which is definitely worth a look.  Otherwise check out a few more shots from the show after the jump.


One Fine Night In A Bookstore


So, the Walden's Books in the mall is closing down this month. They've got seven days left to unload a ton of books on the public. Last night, Mike and I splurged on manga books. :D There was actually an enormous section of manga there, and several artbooks by some of our favorite Japanese artists. I love, absolutely love Yoshitaka Amano and Yoshitoshi Abe, and I was drooling over their large-format artbooks last night. We stuck to the paperbacks, though, and got a pretty sweet deal of 40% off. I wonder, if we go back there on the day before close, if there'll be a better discount.

We also picked up FLCL, volume 7 of Blame (which we can't read yet, since we still need volumes 5 and 6...), and a couple novels based off the game .hack. I'm halfway through one of those novels already...I've been reading for a couple hours this morning, after eating my delicious breakfast and sipping tea. That, folks, is what you call a Good Morning. :D


'Tis the Season, Part Deux....


Ok, the festivities are only a week away, and it still seems that there is so much work to do. Zomg, there's piles of crap everywhere!! =*( Instead of dealing with it, however, I thought a mid-morning break with some hot green tea and a Blog would be nice before I go at it yet again. I swear, I've cleaned more this month than I have in two years. Impressive, eh? (Somewhere in the back of my head, I'm hearing a voice like Darth Vader's replying: "Most Impressive.")

Yes, instead of cleaning, I'd rather just watch anime all the time. Even dubious anime, with a mild plot, is better than cleaning...for example, I was wondering what other works my favorite anime artists had been working on, and had worked on in the past. Angel's Egg (or Tenshi no Tamago) seems a unique anime that Yoshitaka Amano lent his artistic vision to, and of course I had to check it out. Amano is most famous for his character designs and artwork for Final Fantasy, which are timeless classics and gripping RPG's.

Now, I do not know much about the Egg, but it does seem to be very important in this anime, whose heroine is a young girl with sad eyes, oodles of hair, and who runs barefoot through a post-apocalyptic cityscape. She bears a striking resemblence to several of Amano's other heroines, ne? Ah well, my reprise is short-lived: Time to Clean again! =/