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This lavishly
illustrated book showcases fifty-five masterworks by Japanese kimono artist
Itchiku Kubota (1917-2003). Initially determined to unlock the secrets of dyed
and painted Japanese textiles of the fourteenth to early seventeenth
centuries, Kubota ultimately invented a unique method of decoration. His work
combines stitch-resist and ink drawing with a complex layering of color to
achieve hauntingly beautiful landscapes with richly textured surfaces and an
impressionistic rendering of nature never before seen in the textile arts.
Although Kubota produced kimono for Japanese celebrities, his primary endeavor
was the creation of a series of monumental kimonos intended only for display.
Mount Fuji, Universe, and the thirty-four-piece Symphony of Light are his most
important series. The latter two are intended to be shown sequentially, much
like the panels of a Japanese screen or decorated sliding doors. This entirely
new approach to the use of the kimono as a vehicle for pictorial imagery has
enabled Kubota's work to reach beyond the traditional boundaries of the single
garment and elevated his work to installation art. This book accompanies a
touring exhibition and features essays by Dale Carolyn Gluckman, Asian textile
specialist and former costumes and textile curator at the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, and Hollis Goodall, curator of Japanese art at LACMA as well as
an interview with Mr. Kubota's son and artistic heir, Itchiku Kubota II, by
Derrick Cartwright, Director of the San Diego Museum of Art. 200 color
illustrations. hc 160p ISBN 9780500976852
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