Thomsen Gallery is proud to represent the estate of Minol (Minoru) Araki (1928-2010), an individual who spanned Chinese, Japanese and American culture and combined a contemporary professional calling with a private passion for painting. Araki was committed to the wenren ("literati") artistic tradition, both in its original Chinese guise and as reinvigorated by Japanese painters. One facet of this tradition is indifference to commercial gain through artistic production-an indifference that was sincerely felt by Araki, whose financial success enabled him to pursue brush painting solely as an essential aspect of a refined, fruitful, and complete life.

 

Born into a Japanese artistic family in northeastern China, Araki began studying painting at the age of seven. Influenced by the writings of legendary American designer Raymond Loewy, he chose to pursue a career in industry but continued to paint in his spare time even as his work as a designer of consumer electronics took him frequently to Taiwan and Hong Kong as well as to the United States. A key turning point in his artistic formation was a meeting in 1973-when he was already in his forties-with Zhang Daqian (1899-1983), charismatic itinerant master painter, master forger, and one of the most influential figures in the twentieth-century pictorial art of East Asia. Araki became friendly with the elderly genius and with Zhang's encouragement intensified his efforts to carve out a distinctive individual style expressed in dynamic splashed-ink technique, occasionally enhanced by the addition of color, sometimes sparing, sometimes lavish and striking.

 

Araki remained committed to the literati tradition and prized individual expression above all else, seeking always to capture the rhythms of nature in his art. His mature work achieves a fusion of elements from diverse historical periods and cultures: the intimate album painting of China's Song dynasty (960-1279); lively, eye-teasing twentieth-century French still lifes; American artists, especially Ben Shahn (1898-1969); and, above all, the scholar-amateur manner in Chinese and Japanese painting. His atmospheric landscapes and plant paintings, never for sale during his lifetime, were widely exhibited in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the United States and have recently been acquired by several leading American museums.

 

Artist Biography

1928   Born in Dairen, Manchuria, China, to Japanese parents

1935   Began studying brush painting with a local Chinese painter

1945   Studied architecture at Nanman Kōsen (Southern Manchuria Technical College) in Dairen

1945   Repatriated with his family to Japan, settling in Nagasaki

1947   Resumed studies at Kuwazawa Design School, Tokyo

1959   Started his first company, NOL Industrial Design, in Japan

1960s Extensive travel to Europe, the United States, and Mexico

1960s Started his second company, PIPa Corp., in the United States

1973   First meeting with Chang Dai-chien in Taipei

1977   Solo exhibition, Hong Kong City Hall Museum

1978   Solo exhibition, National Museum of History, Taipei

1980   Solo exhibition, National Museum of History, Taipei

1981   Solo exhibition, Hong Kong City Hall Museum

1982   Group exhibition: "Shigen-ten," Tokyo Central Museum

1982   Group exhibition: Eighth "Exposition France-Japon," Paris

1983   Group exhibition: Ninth "Exposition France-Japon," Paris

1999   Solo exhibition, National Museum of History, Taipei

1999   Solo exhibition, Hong Kong Arts Centre

1999   Solo exhibition, Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ

2001   Group exhibition, Pacific Asia Museum, Pasadena, CA

2002   Solo exhibition, Morikami Museum, Delray Beach, FL

2002   Solo exhibition, Indianapolis Art Museum, Indianapolis, IN

2002   Solo exhibition, Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture, Hanford, CA

2005   First gallery exhibition, Gerald Peters Gallery, Santa Fe, NM

2007   Second gallery exhibition, Gerald Peters Gallery, Santa Fe, NM

2010   Died in Tokyo

2012   Solo exhibition, Erik Thomsen Gallery, New York

2015   Solo exhibition, Erik Thomsen Gallery, New York

2017   Retrospective exhibition, Minneapolis Institute of Art, MN

2020   Solo online exhibition, Thomsen Gallery, New York

 

Public Collections Include

Art Institute of Chicago

Asian Art Museum, San Francisco

Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture, Hanford CA

Cleveland Art Museum

Denver Art Museum

Hong Kong Museum of Art

Indianapolis Museum of Art

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Morikami Museum, Delray Beach FL

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

National Museum of History, Taipei

Philadelphia Museum of Art

Phoenix Art Museum

Saint Louis Art Museum

San Antonio Art Museum

USC Pacific Asia Museum, Pasadena CA

Walters Art Museum, Baltimore

Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven CT