Welcome
Search: Advanced ImageBase Search
FAMSF imagebase search results

Search Results

 

Image 1 of 1

 

Shoichi Ida, artist
Japanese, 1941 -
Between Air & Water #2, 1992
92.3 x 94.1 cm (image); 117.1 x 114.4 cm (sheet)
Crown Point Press Archive, Gift of Crown Point Press 1993.51.295

Zoom this image Open Zoom Window

Artist Credit: display

Artist Biography: Shoichi Ida is a painter, sculptor and printmaker. He was born In Kyoto, Japan, and grew up there during World War II and its aftermath. The city had a concentration of art and architectural resources to which he was exposed. At Kyoto Municipal University of Art, Ida received Western-style academic training, a trend in occupied Japan immediately after the war. He discovered his heritage during the late 1960*s while spending three years in Paris, and in New York where he lived two years later. In 1974 he returned to Kyoto where he resides currently (1997), and travels extensively.~EDUCATION: Completed Post Graduate course in Oil Painting Department, Kyoto Municipal University of Art (1965)~SCHOLARSHIPS/AWARDS include:~-Government of France (1968)~-Japan Society (1974)~-Asian Cultural Council, New York (1986)~-The Hitachi Foundation, Washington, DC (1986)~-The Commission for the Centennial of Washington State, Centrum Foundation, Seattle~~~~~ONE PERSON EXHIBITIONS include:~1990-1997~1980-1989~1985 Retrospective, Hara Museum, Tokyo~~~Reference: Kathan Brown, Painters and Sculptors at Crown Point Press: ink, paper, metal, wood (Chronicle Books, San Francisco, 1996).~Catalogue: Karin Breuer, Ruth E. Fine, Steven A. Nash, Thirty-Five Years at Crown Point Press: Making Prints, Doing Art (The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, University of California Press, Berkeley 1997). Exhibitions organized by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.~

Related Keywords
2 Water Air Between Gift Archive Press Point Crown Asia Japan Print Shoichi Ida Japanese 4157201100490085 A038985 1993.51.295 AFGA

   Copyright © 2006 Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco