Open: Mon-Fri 10am-5.30pm

21 Cork Street, W1S 3LZ, London, United Kingdom
Open: Mon-Fri 10am-5.30pm


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The Mayor Gallery at Frieze Masters: Tajiri / Wagemaker

The Mayor Gallery, London

Wed 11 Oct 2023 to Sun 15 Oct 2023

21 Cork Street, W1S 3LZ The Mayor Gallery at Frieze Masters: Tajiri / Wagemaker

Mon-Fri 10am-5.30pm

Artists: Shinkichi Tajiri - Jaap Wagemaker

Booth D12

in collaboration with
BorzoGallery, Amsterdam
Matthijs Erdman BV

“We cannot take anything away from the earth; we can only change its shape.”
- Jaap Wagemaker

To celebrate the centennial of Shinkichi Tajiri (b. 1923 Los Angeles, USA – d. 2009 Baarlo, The Netherlands), The Mayor Gallery, together with BorzoGallery and Matthijs Erdman, presents a wide selection of sculptural works spanning seven decades by the artist alongside four paintings by his contemporary, the Dutch Informel artist Jaap Wagemaker (b. 1906 Haarlem – d. 1972 Amsterdam, The Netherlands).

Artworks

Shinkichi Tajiri

Plastic and metal

136 × 88.5 × 30 cm

Jaap Wagemaker

Mixed media on canvas

121 × 160 cm

Jaap Wagemaker

Mixed media on canvas and wood

96 × 106 cm

Shinkichi Tajiri

Bronze

21 × 75 × 61 cm

Installation Views

Together they participated in the seminal ZERO exhibition in Rotterdamse Kunstkring in 1959 and represented The Netherlands together at the Venice Biennale in 1962. A major sculpture, ‘Machine No.6’, 1967, was acquired this year by Tate Modern (image alongside key work ‘Machine No.5’, 1966 exhibited on our stand).

Born in a family of first-generation Japanese immigrants Tajiri grew up in the United States. After serving in the all-Japanese American regiment to fight in Europe in 1944, he studied at the Art Institute of Chicago until 1948. That year, with a grant from the G.I bill, he moved to Paris and studied with Ossip Zadkine and Fernand Léger, participated in the 1949 CoBrA exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum and moved to Amsterdam in 1956. Over the years Tajiri created a singular body of work. Primarily a sculptor, he invented new techniques such as red brick casting and elaborate bronze drippings. Warrior imagery recurs in Tajiri’s sculpture in a way that seems to process the horrors and paradoxes he experienced during the war, however, pacifism and spirituality is always principal throughout his work. The later Knot series, celebrating post-war friendships, add a meditative perspective to his work.

In December 2023 the Bonnefanten Museum, Maastricht, will hold a solo exhibition on Tajiri titled ‘The Restless Wanderer’. In 2024, he will be included in the ‘Americans in Paris’ exhibition at the Grey Art Museum, New York, celebrating the G.I Bill and the historical impact of the expatriate Post-War art scene.

Jaap Wagemaker is The Netherlands’ foremost representative of the international movement known in the1950s and 60s as Informal Art and more specifically by its technical classification 'matter painting'. Inspired by his frequent trips to North Africa and Near East, Wagemaker’s first experiments with a freer, more robust use of materials dates from 1956, after which he rapidly establishes his reputation as a 'matter painter'. Finding fame in Germany in particular, he exhibited in the major galleries. Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam acquired the first of his works in 1956; his debut exhibition in the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam was in 1957.

Courtesy of The Mayor Gallery

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