Ei-Q Explained

was a Japanese artist who worked in a variety of media, including photography and engraving.

Life and career

Ei-Q, whose early work was done under his real name of Hideo Sugita (Sugita Hideo), was born in Miyazaki-machi (now Miyazaki City), Miyazaki Prefecture on April 28, 1911.[1] In 1925 Sugita entered an art school in Tokyo to study western-style painting, and his criticism of western art started appearing in the art magazines Atelier and Mizue in 1927,[2] in which year he also left the school. In 1930 he entered a photography school and from then on pursued both painting and photography and more particularly photograms, first experimenting briefly with these in 1930, then dropping them in pursuit of painting, and then returning to them in 1936.

Ei-Q was influenced by the Surrealist aesthetic and also published essays promoting photography as an art form independent of painting. This did not imply a rejection of painting, and he worked toward what in 1935 he termed photo-dessins, a fusion of photograms and paintings. A first collection of these, published in an edition of 40 in 1936 as Nemuri no riyū ("the reason for sleep"), took him to the forefront of the Japanese avant garde.[3] Akiko Okatsuka rates Ei-Q (as he had named himself in 1935), together with Sutezō Otono, as standing out among the many Japanese exponents of photograms, unlike the majority in their ability to use them for expressive rather than merely playful ends.[4] Ei-Q also contributed photograms and photography criticism to Photo Times. (He also became an enthusiastic proponent of Esperanto at about the same time.)

Ei-Q set up the art organization Jiyū Bijutsu Kyōkai in 1937; this lasted until 1951.[5]

Ei-Q was able to resume his work after the war and in 1951 set up the group Democratic Artists Association (Demokurāto Bijutsuka Kyōkai) in Osaka. Membership was by invitation only, but the idea was to promote the free expression of members, who included woodblock artists, designers, photographers and others. On Ei-Q's move from Osaka to Urawa later in the same year, the group set up a branch in nearby Tokyo as well; Eikoh Hosoe and Takeji Iwamiya then joined. The Association lasted until 1957, holding exhibitions of its works.[6]

Also in 1951 Ei-Q started etching and lithography; he would continue exploring new art media until his death. He was also active in art education, in 1952 setting up Sōzō Biiku Kyōkai .

Ei-Q died on March 10, 1960.

Exhibitions

Works in permanent collections

Works by Ei-Q are in the permanent collections of the following institutions:

Books by and of Ei-Q

External links

Notes and References

  1. Nihon shashinka jiten / 328 Outstanding Japanese Photographers (Kyoto: Tankōsha, 2000;), p.61. Despite its English-language alternative title, the book is in Japanese only. Biographical material is from this source where not otherwise noted.
  2. Rei Masuda, "Japanese Photography of the 1920s and 1930s: Photographic Works of Koshiro Onchi, Osamu Shiihara and Ei-kyu", Modanizumu no kōseki: Onchi Kōshirō, Ei-Q / Traces of Light in Modernism: Koshiro Onchi, Osamu Shiihara and Ei-Kyu (Tokyo: National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, 1997), pp. 10–11.
  3. Luisa Orto, "Ei-Q (Sugita Hideo)", in Anne Wilkes Tucker, et al., The History of Japanese Photography (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2003;), p.336.
  4. Akiko Okatsuka, "Consciousness and the Expression of the Modern", in Nihon kindai shashin no seiritsu to tenkai / The Founding and Development of Modern Photography in Japan (Tokyo: Tokyo Museum of Photography, 1995), p.23.
  5. Shashinka wa nani o hyōgen shita ka: 1945–1960 (What were photographers expressing? 1945–1960; Tokyo: Konica Plaza, 1991), p.57.
  6. Takako Matsuda, "Democratic Artists Association", in Tucker, et al., The History of Japanese Photography, p.371.
  7. Shashinka wa nani o hyōgen shita ka: 1945–1960, p.57. This source does not specify the name of the gallery.
  8. http://www.momat.go.jp/PressRelease/onchi.html Press release for the exhibition
  9. http://www.momas.jp/003kikaku/k1999/k1999-08/k199908.htm Website of the exhibition
  10. "Atarashii Fukuoka kenritsu bijutsukan no arikata ni tsuite " (PDF file) p.49. pref.fukuoka.lg.jp. Retrieved March 6, 2009.
  11. http://www.city.sayama.saitama.jp/museum/kikakuten/h12autumn/index.htm Web page of the exhibition
  12. http://www.uam.urawa.saitama.jp/tenran.htm List of exhibitions at Urawa Art Museum
  13. http://www.nmao.go.jp/japanese/b2popup/j_admi_eikyu.html Website of the exhibition
  14. http://www.kawag.net/page011.html page about the exhibition
  15. http://homepage3.nifty.com/silkroad-club/hangamuseum/silkhp04a.htm Exhibition schedule for 2008
  16. http://www.kawag.net/page023.html List of exhibitions
  17. [Norihiko Matsumoto]
  18. Matsumoto, ed., Nihon no bijutsukan to shashin korekushon, p. 169.
  19. Ei-Q's work appears in this page about part of the museum's permanent collection. Accessed March 6, 2009.
  20. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/mie-ken.html Mie Prefectural Art Museum
  21. Matsumoto, ed., Nihon no bijutsukan to shashin korekushon, p. 18.
  22. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/miyako.html Miyakonojo City Museum of Art
  23. Ei-Q's work was prominent in the museum's display of its permanent collection during the year 2008–2009: description, Miyazaki Prefectural Art Museum . Retrieved March 6, 2009.
  24. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/nagashima.html Nagashima Museum
  25. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/niigata-shi.html Niigata City Art Museum
  26. http://www.kiryu.co.jp/ohkawamuseum/all_artists.pdf Chart
  27. Matsumoto, ed., Nihon no bijutsukan to shashin korekushon, pp. 32–33.
  28. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/takamasu-shi.html Takamatsu City Museum of Art
  29. http://www.art.tokushima-ec.ed.jp/srch/srch_art_detail.php?pno=1&no=10020 Page on Ei-Q
  30. As denoted by Ei-Q's inclusion within Nihon shashinka jiten, without a disclaimer.
  31. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/mot-art.html MOCAT
  32. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/toneyama-kojin.html Toneyama Kōjin Kinen Bijutsukan
  33. http://www.uam.urawa.saitama.jp/collection.htm Page about the museum's permanent collection
  34. Matsumoto, ed., Nihon no bijutsukan to shashin korekushon, p. 105.
  35. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/yokohama.html Yokohama Museum of Art
  36. http://art.xtone.jp/museum/archives/yokosuka.html Yokosuka Museum of Art