Teruko Yokoi
Art in the Making
- Sheds light on the painting methods and visual vocabulary of Japanese-Swiss painter Teruko Yokoi (1924–2020)
- Analyses and explains cultural and biographical relations in Teruko Yokoi’s art
- Examines the influences of American abstract expressionism on Teruko Yokoi’s painting techniques
The work of Japanese-Swiss painter Teruko Yokoi (1924–2020) is characterised by unflagging creative energy and constant evolution. This book takes an in-depth look at her painting methods and her own vocabulary of abstraction, which was formulated over the course of a long artistic career. Art historian Kuniko Satonobu Spirig, who is also of Japanese origin, analyses and explains cultural and biographical relations in Yokoi’s art, as well as the influences of abstract expressionism on her painting technique.
Raised in the city of Tsushima on the Japanese island of that name, Yokoi moved to Tokyo in 1949, where she attended the private Joshibi University of Art and Design (Joshibijutsu Daigaku). In 1954, she went to the United States, where she completed her education at the San Francisco Art Institute and with painters Hans Hofmann and Julian E. Levi in New York. There she met artists such as Sam Francis—whom she married in 1959— Mark Rothko, and Kenzo Okada. In this environment, she drew new energy and began to develop her own style of abstraction and to invent her own idiom. In 1962, she moved to Switzerland, where she lived and worked tirelessly in the city of Bern until her death.
Text in English and Japanese.
- Publisher
- Scheidegger & Spiess
- ISBN
- 9783039422623
- Publish date
- 10th Mar 2025
- Binding
- Paperback / softback
- Territory
- World excluding Austria, France, Germany, Switzerland, Puerto Rico, United States, Canada, and Japan
- Size
- 235 mm x 165 mm
- Pages
- 96 Pages
- Illustrations
- 36 color, 6 b&w
Distributed by ACC Art Books
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