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Collages by Nobuo Kitagaki, May 23-June 28, 1953

 Sub-Series

Scope and Contents

An exhibition of 25 abstract collages by American artist Nobuo Kitagaki.
The exhibition records span two folders and include a price list and registration receipts. A copy of the exhibition catalog is in the catalog collection. Installation and object photograph prints and negatives are in the photograph collection.

Dates

  • Creation: May 23-June 28, 1953

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The price list must be redacted before viewing.

Biographical / Historical

Nobuo Kitagaki was an American artist born in Oakland, California on February 10, 1918. His parents belonged to the Kumamoto prefecture. He grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area until World War II broke out in 1941. With the passage of Executive Order 9066 in 1942, Kitagaki and his family were forced to move to Tanforan Assembly Center in San Bruno, California, and then to a concentration camp in Topaz, Utah. During his incarceration at Topaz, Kitagaki established the camp library and also applied his literary and artistic interest to camp publications, Tanforan Totalizer in San Bruno, and Trek at Topaz. Kitagaki volunteered for service in the U.S. Army in 1943. He eventually ended up in the Military Intelligence Service and later in the Special Services when the army took note of his artistic abilities. After his honorable discharge, he moved to New York City, where he enrolled at the Cooper Union art school. He later attended the Chicago Institute of Design from 1947 to 1949, where he studied under Hungarian painter and photographer László Moholy-Nagy, under whose influence he moved from more traditional watercolors to collages and abstractions. In 1949, he returned to San Francisco to attend the California School of Fine Arts and finally concluded his formal education at San Francisco State College.

Kitagaki was a memorable character who haunted the sidewalks of San Francisco's bohemian North Beach neighborhood, particularly because he was blind in one eye as a result of a mugging. Kitagaki had an apartment on Romolo Place and a workshop on the corner of Union and Grant and supported himself by working as a transcriber for the California Social Welfare Department. Working with his father, he built Japanese shoji screens, which they sold from a shop on Grant Avenue called Tokanoma Gallery, which also served as a showroom for Kitagaki's modernist collages. Throughout the 1950s, he exhibited his collages in numerous important solo exhibitions: at Henry Lenoir's Vesuvio (1950); Lucien Labaudt Gallery, San Francisco (1950); the Berkeley Garden Library (1952); the Legion of Honor, San Francisco (1953); and group exhibitions at the San Francisco Museum of Art (1948, 1951). He was awarded ten design awards and was well-known for his annual ""Teahouse in the Trees"" from the jury of the San Francisco Art Festival one year, and also actively applied his design work to the Oshogatsu Festival and Nihonmachi Fair in Japantown. In later years, his eyesight may have impacted his ability to continue as a professional artist, and he made his living by typing and working as a transcriber. He also gave lectures on his internment experience at various California state universities, and on his career as an artist at San Francisco State University. He died on September 22, 1984, in Portland, Oregon.

Source: https://encyclopedia.densho.org/Nobuo_Kitagaki/

Extent

0.1 Linear Feet (The exhibition records span two folders plus a catalog and photographs.)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Abstract

An exhibition of 25 abstract collages by American artist Nobuo Kitagaki. The exhibition records span two folders plus a catalog and photographs.

Arrangement

The materials are separated by content and type and organized chronologically.

Related Exhibitions

Legion of Honor: Exhibition of Paintings by Noboru Foujioka (1927)
Legion of Honor: Paintings by Noboru Foujioka (1932)
Legion of Honor: Paintings by Henry Sugimoto (1933)
Legion of Honor: Exhibition of Paintings by Four Japanese Artists (1934)
Legion of Honor: Watercolors by Ellen Akiko Ochi (1951)
Legion of Honor: Collages by Nobuo Kitagaki (1953)
de Young: Paintings by Kenzo Okada (1966)
de Young: American Heroes: Japanese American World War II Nisei Soldiers and the Congressional Gold Medal (2013)

Separated Materials

The exhibition catalog is housed in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Catalog collection in box 1. Installation and object photograph prints and negatives are housed in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Photograph collection in box 14.

Repository Details

Part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Archives Repository

Contact:
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr
San Francisco California 94118 USA