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Hideko Fukushima ( 福島秀子, ''Fukushima Hideko''; 1927 – July 2, 1997), born Aiko Fukushima, was a Japanese
avant-garde The avant-garde (; In 'advance guard' or ' vanguard', literally 'fore-guard') is a person or work that is experimental, radical, or unorthodox with respect to art, culture, or society.John Picchione, The New Avant-garde in Italy: Theoretical ...
painter born in the Nogizaka neighborhood of
Tokyo Tokyo (; ja, 東京, , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis ( ja, 東京都, label=none, ), is the capital and largest city of Japan. Formerly known as Edo, its metropolitan area () is the most populous in the world, with an estimated 37.468 ...
. She was known as both a founding member of the Tokyo-based postwar avant-garde artist collective
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
and as a talented painter infamously recruited into '' Art Informel'' circles by the critic Michel Tapié during his 1957 trip to Japan. As a member of
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
she not only participated in art exhibitions, but also designed visuals for slide shows and costumes and set pieces for dances, theatrical performances, and recitals. She contributed to the postwar push that challenged both the boundaries between media and the nature of artistic collaboration, culminating in the intermedia experiments of
Expo '70 The or Expo 70 was a world's fair held in Suita, Osaka Prefecture, Japan between March 15 and September 13, 1970. Its theme was "Progress and Harmony for Mankind." In Japanese, Expo '70 is often referred to as . It was the first world's fair ...
. Fukushima was well-recognized as an
avant-garde The avant-garde (; In 'advance guard' or ' vanguard', literally 'fore-guard') is a person or work that is experimental, radical, or unorthodox with respect to art, culture, or society.John Picchione, The New Avant-garde in Italy: Theoretical ...
painter in the 1950s and early 1960s despite never having received formal training. With the support of such figures as Nobuya Abe and
Shūzō Takiguchi was a Japanese poet, art critic, and artist. He was the central figure of orthodox Surrealism in pre- and postwar Japan. Devoting his life to exemplifying the movement in its orthodox form. Starting in the 1950s, he began offering new experime ...
, she experimented with abstract, cubist, constructivist, and surrealist forms, charting a trajectory from experiments with figurative and facial forms to produce process-based paintings featuring the technique of “stamping” (捺す). It was her works featuring pressed circles and lines that caught the eye of Michel Tapié, and which were featured in various European exhibitions in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Now her work is held in the collections of the Tate Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art Tokyo, and the Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, among others.


Biography


Early life and career

Fukushima grew up in a creative household, raised by a mother trained in
Japanese dance Japanese traditional dance describes a number of Japanese dance styles with a long history and prescribed method of performance. Some of the oldest forms of traditional Japanese dance may be among those transmitted through the tradition, or fol ...
and the tea ceremony. She graduated from
Bunka Gakuin is a Japanese vocational school. It opened in 1921 as the first co-educational school in Japan. Alumni * Hisae Imai * Takako Irie * Liu Chi-hsiang * Yoko Mizuki * Akiko Santo * Akira Terao *Mitsu Yashima * Guan Zilan Guan Zilan (; January 1 ...
in 1943, and like many other artists of her generation, never underwent the formal western-style training in drawing and copying techniques that was commonly taught in art schools. Instead, after meeting
Katsuhiro Yamaguchi Katsuhiro Yamaguchi (山口勝弘, ''Yamaguchi Katsuhiro''; 22 April 1928—2 May 2018) was a Japanese artist and art theorist based in Tokyo and Yokohama. Through his collaborations, writings, and teaching, he promoted an interdisciplinary avant-ga ...
and Shōzō Kitadai in July 1948 at the Summer Modern Art Seminar associated with the Avant-Garde Artists Club (日本アヴァンギャルド美術クラブ)—the three joined four other artists, including Miyoko Yanagida, to form the Shichiyōkai group in August 1948. She debuted as an artist at the 1948 Shichiyōkai Exhibition, then participated in several art discussion groups including the Avant Garde Art Research Group,
Yoru no Kai Yoru no Kai (夜の会, “Night Society,” est. 1947/1948) was a short-lived but highly influential art research and discussion group founded in early postwar Japan by two major theorists, Kiyoteru Hanada and Tarō Okamoto. While Hanada was a lit ...
, and Century (Seiki no kai). Within this milieu, there were few other female artists. She participated in the third iteration of the Women’s Painting Association’s (
Joryū Gaka Kyōkai Joryū Gaka Kyōkai (女流画家協会, Association of Women Painters) is a prominent exhibition society for Japanese women artists that was founded in 1947 by the painters Setsuko Migishi, Yuki Katsura, Eiko Fujikawa, and others. Inspired by th ...
) annual exhibition in 1949, alongside such painters as
Yuki Katsura Yuki Katsura (桂ゆき, ''Katsura Yuki,'' also ''Katsura Yukiko,'' 10 October 1913 – 5 February 1991) was a Japanese artist whose career spanned from the prewar to the postwar eras. During her six-decade career, Katsura did not conform to one ...
and Aiko Katatani. Through her involvement in the Summer Modern Art Seminar, she met surrealist painter Nobuya Abe and became involved in Studio 50, an artistic research group that met in his studio. The group self-published a mimeographed booklet, invited critics to speak, and read texts such as György Kepes’ ''Language of Vision'' together. Aside from Fukushima and Abe, members included photographer
Kiyoji Ōtsuji was a Japanese photographer, photography theorist, and educator. He was active in the avant-garde art world in Japan after World War II, both creating his own experimental photographs, and taking widely circulated documentary photographs of other ...
, artist Hideko Urushibara, and sculptor Aiko Miyawaki. A series of photographs were taken in Abe’s studio during this time, directed by Abe, shot by Ōtsuji, and featuring Fukushima and other members of the group. While Fukushima is clothed and generally facing more or less toward the camera in images titled "Portrait of an artist," one features another female member of the group nude with her face covered, and the overall series treats human figures in a manner that seems to prefigure Ōtsuji’s later object-centric surrealistic photographic style. A selection of these photographs was published in the October 1950 issue of the magazine ''Camera'' (Kamera) for a special feature on "The New Photographic Staging by Modern Artists," leaving open the question of who is the artist and blurring the lines between artist and subject. Art historian Midori Yoshimoto argues that these photographs portray the tenuous position of Fukushima and other women artists in Japan at the time, "facing the persisting reality of a woman serving as an object for male artists," even when they are depicted as artists themselves.


Participation in Jikken Kōbō

It was through Abe that Fukushima met the internationally active surrealist critic and writer
Shūzō Takiguchi was a Japanese poet, art critic, and artist. He was the central figure of orthodox Surrealism in pre- and postwar Japan. Devoting his life to exemplifying the movement in its orthodox form. Starting in the 1950s, he began offering new experime ...
, and through his support, she gained further prominence throughout the 1950s. In 1951, Fukushima became a founding member of the Tokyo-based 1950s avant-garde collective
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
, an experimental multi-disciplinary and technologically-inclined group for whom Takiguchi served as mentor. Fukushima was one of three visual artists in Jikken Kōbō alongside
Katsuhiro Yamaguchi Katsuhiro Yamaguchi (山口勝弘, ''Yamaguchi Katsuhiro''; 22 April 1928—2 May 2018) was a Japanese artist and art theorist based in Tokyo and Yokohama. Through his collaborations, writings, and teaching, he promoted an interdisciplinary avant-ga ...
and Shōzō Kitadai, and her brother, musician and composer Kazuo Fukushima, was also a member, but she was the sole female participant in the collective. The group's activities were inspired by the European Dadaists,
Surrealists Surrealism is a cultural movement that developed in Europe in the aftermath of World War I in which artists depicted unnerving, illogical scenes and developed techniques to allow the unconscious mind to express itself. Its aim was, according to l ...
, and
Bauhaus The Staatliches Bauhaus (), commonly known as the Bauhaus (), was a German art school operational from 1919 to 1933 that combined crafts and the fine arts.Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 4th edn., 200 ...
—movements in which Takiguchi was most deeply invested, but responded to the specific circumstances of 1950s Tokyo, recovering as it was from the war defeat and destruction. They further distinguished themselves through their commitment to a form of collaboration in which the distinction between individuals contributions would be masked to create a collective statement with each performance, exhibition, or presentation. A statement for their first public presentation in 1951 declared their intention “to combine the various art forms, reaching an organic combination that could not be realized within the combinations of a gallery exhibition, and to create a new style of art with social relevance closely related to everyday life.” Fukushima's role in the group was exemplary of this collaborative ethos. Although she exhibited her paintings as part of
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
’s 1952 exhibition at Takemiya Gallery and 1956 exhibition at Fūgetsu-dō, both in Tokyo, much of her work in the collective involved her experimenting with other forms of visual expression, including designing sets and costumes for the group’s stage performance works. In fact, from
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
's first public presentation of the dance performance ''The Joy of Life'', performed at Hibiya Public Hall in 1951 to accompany the first
Picasso Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and Scenic design, theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France. One of the most influential artists of the 20th ce ...
exhibition in Tokyo; Fukushima was creating bold geometric costume designs for the dancers to wear as they navigated between Shōzō Kitadai's mobile-like set pieces. Other examples of her experiments in non-painting media included her collaboration with her brother Kazuo, creating the visuals for the 1953 autoslide projection ''Foam is Created'' (Minawa wa tsukurareru), and her designs for costumes and set pieces for the group’s 1955 performances of
Arnold Schoenberg Arnold Schoenberg or Schönberg (, ; ; 13 September 187413 July 1951) was an Austrian-American composer, music theorist, teacher, writer, and painter. He is widely considered one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. He was as ...
’s 1912 '' Pierrot Lunaire'' at Sankei International Conference Hall, Tokyo.


Role in ''Art Informel''

Just before
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
unofficially disbanded in 1957, Michel Tapié visited Japan for the first time. During this five-week tour, he visited
Tokyo Tokyo (; ja, 東京, , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis ( ja, 東京都, label=none, ), is the capital and largest city of Japan. Formerly known as Edo, its metropolitan area () is the most populous in the world, with an estimated 37.468 ...
and
Osaka is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan. It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture, and the third most populous city in Japan, following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama. With a population of 2. ...
, meeting with
Sōfū Teshigahara Sōfū Teshigahara ( 勅 使 河 原 蒼 風 ''Teshigahara Sōfū'', 1900–1979) was the founder of the ''Sōgetsu-ryū'' school of ''ikebana'' flower arranging. Biography He was born in Tokyo. He learned flower arranging from his father, who ...
, the
Gutai Art Association The was a Japanese avant-garde artist group founded in the Hanshin region by young artists under the leadership of the painter Jirō Yoshihara in Ashiya, Japan, in 1954. The group, today one of the most internationally-recognized instances of ...
,
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
, and a number of other figures in the Japanese art scene. It was in this context that he encountered Fukushima's paintings in a gallery, then took the opportunity to visit her studio, eventually encountering her again when he met with the whole Jikken Kōbō group. In his reflections on the trip published as an article for the December 1957 issue of the art periodical ''Bijutsu techō,'' Tapié highlighted Fukushima as one of the most promising artists he met, writing: ::In my view she is an artist of high caliber. I happened to walk into a gallery in central Tokyo, and there I came upon a work that captivated me in every way...The many works I saw n Fukushima's studio due to their nature and the direction of their deep exploration, only confirmed my initial response. She is a rare artist, one who is still hard to categorize, but who is certainly among those to watch and think about in order to correctly understand the forefront of art today and what it proposes for the future. Tapié's attention launched Fukushima onto the international circuit, and in the late 1950s and early 1960s, she participated in a number of shows in
Europe Europe is a large peninsula conventionally considered a continent in its own right because of its great physical size and the weight of its history and traditions. Europe is also considered a Continent#Subcontinents, subcontinent of Eurasia ...
. However, upon her return to Japan after a year and four months in Europe in the early 1960s, there was a marked drop in interest in her work. Nakajima notes that this may have been in part due to her getting married, but it also followed a similar pattern to other new Japanese women artists of the early postwar. Although she continued exhibiting works through the 1980s and into the 1990s, including her later Blue Series, she never regained the spotlight in the Japanese art world.


Re-evaluation

In spite of Fukushima's prominence in the 1950s and 1960s, with critics and curators including
Shūzō Takiguchi was a Japanese poet, art critic, and artist. He was the central figure of orthodox Surrealism in pre- and postwar Japan. Devoting his life to exemplifying the movement in its orthodox form. Starting in the 1950s, he began offering new experime ...
, Michel Tapié, and Atsushi Miyakawa discussing and promoting her work, by the 1980s she was rarely featured in the Japanese art press despite her continued gallery exhibitions. However, curator and art historian Reiko Kokatsu's 2005 exhibition on Japanese postwar women artists brought renewed attention to the structural problems women artists faced in getting their work recognized, and prompted a reevaluation of the work of a number of women artists including Hideko Fukushima. In 2009, a large donation of Fukushima's works was made to the
Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo The is a contemporary art museum in Koto, Tokyo, Japan. The museum is located in Kiba Park. It was opened in 1995. Collections *''Marilyn Monroe'' by Andy Warhol (1967) *'' Girl with Hair Ribbon'' by Roy Lichtenstein (1965) *''Honey-pop'' by ...
and Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, further adding impetus to a reconsideration of her role in the Japanese postwar avant-garde. More recent exhibitions focused on
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
and the
Gutai Art Association The was a Japanese avant-garde artist group founded in the Hanshin region by young artists under the leadership of the painter Jirō Yoshihara in Ashiya, Japan, in 1954. The group, today one of the most internationally-recognized instances of ...
have reignited research into the roles of Japanese artists in the transnational histories of postwar technological art and '' Art Informel'', reiterating the importance of Fukushima's practice. In 2012, the
Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo The is a contemporary art museum in Koto, Tokyo, Japan. The museum is located in Kiba Park. It was opened in 1995. Collections *''Marilyn Monroe'' by Andy Warhol (1967) *'' Girl with Hair Ribbon'' by Roy Lichtenstein (1965) *''Honey-pop'' by ...
, presented a collection exhibition focused on Hideko Fukushima, allowing audiences the first opportunity in two decades to see a more comprehensive body of her work. Art historian Izumi Nakajima's 2019 book (in Japanese) on postwar women painters devoted a full chapter to analyzing her oeuvre, the most comprehensive analysis of her work to date, though recent museum exhibitions and magazine features on Japanese women artists indicate the possibility of further analysis of her work moving forward.


Painting style and development


Faces and figures

Art historian Izumi Nakajima cites three artists as Fukushima's influences in her early painting practice, namely Masanori Murai, Nobuya Abe, and
Paul Klee Paul Klee (; 18 December 1879 – 29 June 1940) was a Swiss-born German artist. His highly individual style was influenced by movements in art that included expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. Klee was a natural draftsman who experimented wi ...
. Nakajima argues that Fukushima drew cubist, constructivist, and surrealist influences through their examples while maintaining some distance from the discourse of these movements by rejecting terms like automatism, rather advocating a rejection of a will ''dependent on'' ''emotion''. Among the more ubiquitous themes for painting in the immediate postwar period in Japan were the face and the human body. As art historian Bert Winther-Tamaki has argued, this was closely tied to attempts by artists to reject wartime rhetoric that emphasized spirit over corporeal life, encouraging young soldiers to give up their lives for the continuity of the Japanese spirit-as-nation-state, realized most pointedly in Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita's paintings of bodies strewn across battlefields, blending with each other and with the earth into monotone masses (ex:
Attu Island Gokusai
', 1943). Against this precedent, painters active in the early postwar, such as Ichirō Fukuzawa and Nobuya Abe, often focused on the materiality of the body, on individual bodies broken by war, and on face-like forms in an attempt to reestablish a kind of
humanism Humanism is a philosophical stance that emphasizes the individual and social potential and agency of human beings. It considers human beings the starting point for serious moral and philosophical inquiry. The meaning of the term "humani ...
denied by war propaganda and to critique the material conditions of the postwar. Looking specifically at the precedents for mother-and-child paintings and human figures in the work of Abe and Murai, Nakajima argues that Fukushima's face-like paintings maintain an ambiguity that gives them anonymity and even lends some a botanical character that uncomfortably resists the human-centric and individualistic impulses in humanist rhetoric. Nakajima contrasts the playful spontaneity of Murai's layered but misaligned body-like colored shapes and thick lineforms in ''Mother and Child'' '' aha to ko' (1950) that appear to convey urban bustle and energy with Fukushima's own ''Mother and Child'' ''
oshi ''Oshi'' (Kanji: 押) is a strategy board game published by WizKids and designed by Tyler Bielman. ''Oshi'' is played on a 9×9 board and each player controls a set of 8 pieces (colored oxblood or ivory). Story of the game According to the ins ...
' (1948). Fukushima's work features similarly thick lines dividing the canvas, but these also serve as boundaries for colored regions, and divide up the canvas into fairly similarly-sized parcels while vaguely resembling a face, a breast, and the Japanese character for "mother" (母). Against Murai's clear positive intention, Nakajima sees the layered readings of Fukushima's painting as a resistance to easy humanist expression. Yet in other early figurative paintings by Fukushima, such as
Monomaniac II
' (1950), she seems to draw on Murai's playfulness, though this tendency recedes as her painting practice develops further. In contrast to Abe's cubist figures, such as
Sakuhin ("Monomane kozō" no shūsaku)
' of 1950, Fukushima's rendering of a military policeman directing traffic in
MP
' (1950) reads as somewhere between a human form, a fish mouth, and a leaf-covered tree-form, blending seemingly human and non-human elements ambiguously. As Fukushima's practice develops through the mid-to-late 1960s, and as she begins incorporating the stamping process into her work, those paintings that still appear to maintain some similarity to face-like forms become much more deconstructed, darker, less mobile, and less playful, such as
Untitled
' (1955),
Visitor
' (1956), and
An Offering
' (1957). Most notably, they tend to lack the clear defining facial features that would render emotions legible, instead leaving the viewer with some ambiguity as to the emotional state of these quasi-faces and pushing against the humanist expression of feelings.


Stamping

Fukushima is also well recognized for her use of the process of stamping in her paintings from the later 1950s through the 1960s. Fukushima used various materials soaked with
sumi ink Inksticks () or ink cakes are a type of solid Chinese ink used traditionally in several Chinese and East Asian art forms such as calligraphy and brush painting. Inksticks are made mainly of soot and animal glue, sometimes with incense or medicin ...
to stamp over paper soaked in watercolor washes and gouached surfaces, as well as to create darkened impressions in layers of oil paint and similar materials on canvas. Most often the stamped shapes consisted of lines or circles, as can be seen in
Work
' (1958) and

' (1959). Midori Yoshimoto posits the circular forms that became a hallmark of Fukushima's stamping practice as possibly "inspired by Fukushima’s experience in creating a slide projection show entitled ''Minawa wa tsukurareru'' (Form Is Created; 1953), in collaboration with her brother, composer Kazuo Fukushima" as part of
Jikken Kōbō Jikken Kōbō (実験工房, official English name: "Experimental Workshop") was one of the first avant-garde artist collectives active in postwar Japan. It was founded in Tokyo in 1951 by a group of artists working in various media. Until its dis ...
, describing these more '' Art Informel'' works as having "explored the constantly shifting relationship between field and form." This greater ambiguity in compositional strategies in Fukushima's later work is generally recognized as having been tied to a shift away from compositional painting, and toward process through the act of stamping. As the critic Atsushi Miyakawa quoted Fukushima as stating in a feature on her practice for the August 1963 issue of the art magazine ''Bijutsu techō'', "I had serious doubts about the act of painting." Art historian and curator Yuri Mitsuda connects this assertion to an interest in "surrealist-inflected automatist techniques" that "emphasized process over completion." Nakajima takes this reading a step further to argue that Fukushima rejects both the thoughtless automatism of Surrealism, instead relying on a deeply internal, bodily-led rhythms to guide movements that are at once materially based and void of the emotiveness painters like Nobuya Abe had introduced into their abstract works by the mid-1950s. Similarly, in spite of Fukushima's having been picked up by Michel Tapié as part of his advocacy of ''Art Informel'', Nakajima argues that Fukushima's concerns were actually a difficult fit with the common assumptions of individual expression, bold painterly action, and emotive mark-making that prevailed in action painting circles including '' Art Informel'' and the American
Abstract Expressionist Abstract expressionism is a post–World War II art movement in American painting, developed in New York City in the 1940s. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York at the center of the ...
movement. Instead, the act of stamping or pressing shapes into the painted surfaces of her works severely limited the "painterliness" of her expressions. Nakajima postis that Fukushima's rejection of this male-dominated ego-centric model of painting had a gendered dimension, reflecting the doubts and criticisms of both the art world that would be more apparent to Fukushima given her ambiguous status as both a "lady painter" and a serious internationally recognized avant-garde artist.


Blue Series

Fukushima's Blue Series began in the 1970s after the intense interest in her work had waned, but it continued certain themes from her earlier paintings, namely the concern with finding alternatives to the action of painting. Rather than "painting," she saw these works, which incorporated blue pigment bleeding across the surface of the work in different forms, as rooted in the act of "pushing" (a homonym for "stamping" in Japanese). Although her early works in blue tended to feature more ambiguous, ill-defined, or bleeding forms, by 1986 she had introduced simple but sharp contrasting lines into the compositions. This is most striking in
Gogatsu no shindō III [May Vibrations III
/nowiki>">ay Vibrations III">Gogatsu no shindō III [May Vibrations III
/nowiki>' (1986), which features thin horizontal contrasting lines of blue and white across the center of a horizontally-aligned canvas surrounded by deep blues and purples bleeding toward the upper and lower edges of the picture plane.


Selected exhibitions


Solo exhibitions

1952 Solo show, Takemiya Gallery, Tokyo 1954 ''Hideko Fukushima Solo Show'', Takemiya Gallery, Tokyo 1959 ''Hideko Fukushima Solo Show'', Muramatsu Gallery, Tokyo 1963 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Minami Gallery, Tokyo 1974 ''Hideko Fukushima Solo Exhibition'', American Club, Tokyo 1975 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Nantenshi Gallery, Tokyo 1976 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Ao Gallery, Tokyo 1979 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Nantenshi Gallery, Tokyo 1982 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Nantenshi Gallery, Tokyo 1986 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Nantenshi Gallery, Tokyo 1987 ''Hideko Fukushima Exhibition'', Bunka Gakuin Gallery, Tokyo 1988 ''Hideko Fukushima'' ''Exhibition'', Bunka Gakuin Gallery, Tokyo 1992 ''12th Exhibition Homage to Shuzo Takiguchi: Hideko Fukushima'' 「第12回オマージュ滝口修造―福島秀子展 1948‐1988」, Satani Gallery (佐谷 画廊), Tokyo 2012 ''MOT Collection Special Feature: Hideko Fukushima / Chronicle 1964-OFF MUSEUM'' (特集展示福島秀子:編年史1964- OFF MUSEUM), Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo 2017 ''Fukushima Hideko'', Tokyo Publishing House, Tokyo 2018 ''Fukushima Hideko'', Taka Ishii Gallery, New York


Group exhibitions

1948 ''Shichiyōkai Exhibition'', 北荘画廊'','' Nihonbashi, Tokyo 1952 ''The 3rd Experimental Workshop Presentation “Plastic Arts Exhibition,”'' Takemiya Gallery, Tokyo 1955 ''Experimental Workshop Exhibition: Painting, Sculpture, Photography'', Muramatsu Gallery, Tokyo 1955 ''International Watercolor Exhibition, 18th Biennial'', Brooklyn Museum, New York 1955 ''Present-Day Promising Artists Exhibition 1955 [Konnichi no shinjin 1955-nen-ten]'', Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Modern Art 1956 ''Summer Exhibition: Enjoying New Perspective and Space, by the Members of Experimental Workshop,'' Fūgetsu-dō, Tokyo 1957 ''15 Vanguard Artists'', Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo 1959 ''XI Premio Lissone'', Italy 1961 ''Paris Biennale'', Paris, France 2005 ''Japanese Women Artsts in Avant-garde Movements, 1950-1975'', Tochigi Prefectural Museum of Fine Arts, Utsunomiya, Japan 2013 ''Jikken Kōbō–Experimental Workshop'', The Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura & Hayama; Iwaki City Art Museum, Fukushima; Museum of Modern Art, Toyama; Kitakyushu Municipal Museum of Art, Kitakyushu; Setagaya Art Museum, Tokyo 2013 ''Tokyo 1955-1970: A New Avant-Garde'',
The Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. It plays a major role in developing and collecting modern art, and is often identified as one of the ...
, New York


Collections


Artizon MuseumIshibashi Foundation
* Chiba City Museum of Art
Itabashi Art Museum

Matsumoto City Museum of Art

The Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo
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The Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura & Hayama

National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo

National Museum of Art, Osaka



Taro Okamoto Museum of Art, Kawasaki
* Takamatsu Municipal Museum * Tate Museum, London
Tochigi Prefectural Museum of Fine Art

Toyama Prefectural Museum of Art and Design

Ishii Collection, The University of Tsukuba

James Keith Brown and Eric Diefenbach Collection, USA


References


Further sources

* Katsuhiro Yamaguchi,
The World of Fukushima Hideko: Breaking Away, Into Images
, ''Art Platform Japan BUNKA-CHO'', trans. Kohno Haruko (July 30, 2021). {{DEFAULTSORT:Fukushima, Hideko 1927 births 1997 deaths People from Minato Artists from Tokyo 20th-century Japanese women artists 20th-century Japanese artists 20th-century Japanese painters Japanese women painters Avant-garde art