Saburo Muraoka
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Saburō Muraoka ( 村岡三郎, ''Muraoka Saburō'', 25 June 1928 – 3 July 2013) was a Japanese modern and contemporary artist born in Osaka.


Career

Known primarily as a sculptor, Muraoka first received artistic recognition in 1949 as a student at the Osaka City Art Institute (大阪市立美術研究所), a school associated with Osaka City Museum of Fine Arts, with his plaster bust "Neck." With this work he received the second Osaka Mayor prize while exhibited at the annual Osaka City Exhibition. He became affiliated with the Nika Society (二科会) in 1950 and showed in the annual Nika Exhibition from 1950 until 1969 when he withdrew from the Society. At a young age he became fascinated by astronomy, an interest that would turn into an ongoing engagement with the sciences in his artistic practice. His experiences as a youth during and after the Second World War, during which his brother died in Manchuria, also influenced his decision to become an artist. He is known for his use of unusual materials such as iron, sulfur, salt, and oxygen tanks, as well for his aesthetic engagement with dynamic qualities like heat, vibration, and decay to capture "the delicate equilibrium of both life-forming and destructive natural forces." An early example of Muraoka's artistic approach of manipulating states of matter is his "July 1954" (1954) for which he is credited with producing the first welded sculpture in Japan. This work is now a part of the permanent collection at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. The overlap of art and theoretical questions of the sciences was an interest he shared with
Yutaka Matsuzawa was a pioneer conceptual artist. He was active from the 1950s until his death in central Japan. Life and education Matsuzawa was born on February 2, 1922, in Shimosuwa in mountainous central Japan. His impressionable years were spent during Jap ...
, with whom he once collaborated. He was also acquainted with
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 ...
founder
Jiro Yoshihara was a Japanese painter, art educator, curator, and businessman. Mainly known for his gestural abstract impasto paintings from the 1950s and Zen-painting inspired hard-edge ''Circles'' beginning in the 1960s, Yoshihara’s oeuvre also encompasses ...
, who invited him to participate in
Gutai 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 o ...
activities in 1961. Muraoka attended a meeting at Yoshihara’s house but felt uncomfortable and did not participate beyond that. Despite Muraoka’s primary reputation in sculpture, his practice spanned many different media over his career and particularly during the 1970s when he experimented with photography, drawing, video and audio. Many projects could be considered intermedia as well, such as his 1972 work "棒 " (“Stick”), a video installation work that complicated the categories of sculpture and film through a projection of an object onto the object itself. This work was presented in the 5th Exhibition of Contemporary Plastic Art: Expression in Film ’72—Thing. Place. Time. Space: Equivalent Cinema in 1972 at the
Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art The is one of the oldest art museums in Japan. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005)"Museums"in ''Japan Encyclopedia'', pp. 671-673. It is located in Okazaki Park in Sakyō-ku, Kyoto, and opened in 1928 as a commemoration of Emperor Hirohito's coro ...
. Another example of Muraoka working between media is "This Accidental Co-Action as an Incident," also in 1972. Working collaboratively with
Norio Imai Norio (written: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , or in hiragana) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: *, Japanese rower *Norio Hayakawa (born 1944), American activist *, Japanese speed skater *, Ja ...
and Tōru Kuranuki, recordings of the artists’ heartbeats were played from the roof of a building onto an Osaka street for ten days to intersperse with the noise of the public. This audio work was editioned in 2019 by Art & Space Cococara and Japanese Art Sound Archive. His 1973 collaborative video work with
Tatsuo Kawaguchi Tatsuo Kawaguchi (河口龍夫, ''Kawaguchi Tatsuo'', born in 1940, Kobe Japan) is a Japanese multidisciplinary artist, whose practice often involves the use of objects and the investigation of materials. After studying painting at Tama Art Univers ...
and Keiji Uematsu, "Image of Image-Seeing", also experimented with methods of public dissemination, originally premiering on the NHK broadcasting station's "Hyōgo no jikan" (Hyōgo Hours) television program. This work was included in Electronic Arts Intermix’s DVD anthology and catalog publication "Vital Signs: Early Japanese Video Art" in 2010. Much of Muraoka's video work is archived at Electronic Arts Intermix in New York City. Muraoka was a professor at Kansai Women's Art Junior College until 1981. From 1981 to 1993 he was a faculty member at Shiga University, after which he was a professor at Kyoto Seika University from 1993 to 2002. In 1965 he received the K Award at the "1st Contemporary Japanese Sculpture Exhibition" in Ube, Yamaguchi. He also won the 40th Mainichi Art Award in 1999. His work “Negative Copper Coin” (1973), appeared on the cover of the November 1973 issue of Bijutsu Techō magazine. For this piece Muraoka rubbed two 10 yen coins with his hands to gradually wear away the symbolic information and return the objects to their mere material. Notable exhibitions include "Saburo Muraoka: Salt/Heat/Oxygen", a retrospective at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo in 1997 (which subsequently traveled to The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto in 1998) and the
44th Venice Biennale The 44th Venice Biennale, held in 1990, was an exhibition of international contemporary art, with 49 participating nations. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Prizewinners of the 44th Biennale included: Giovanni Anselm ...
Japan pavilion, which he shared with
Toshikatsu Endō is a Japanese artist and sculptor. Endō was born in 1950 in Takayama, Gifu. He graduated from Nagoya Junior College of Art and Design in 1972. He exhibited at Documenta 8 in 1987 and at the Venice Biennale in 1990. Works Endō is one of ...
in 1990. His work is in the permanent collections of
Toyota Municipal Museum of Art The is an art museum located in the city of Toyota, Aichi Prefecture, Japan. History The museum features works by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Edvard Munch, and others. The museum building was constructed by Yoshio Taniguchi, who also renovated ...
and the Shiga Prefectural Museum of Modern Art among others.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Muraoka, Saburo 1928 births 2013 deaths 20th-century Japanese sculptors