Shigeko Kubota | |
|---|---|
Shigeko Kubota in her studio, 1972 | |
| Born | (1937-08-02)August 2, 1937 |
| Died | July 23, 2015(2015-07-23) (aged 77) New York City,New York, U.S. |
| Alma mater | Tokyo University of Education New York University The New School |
| Known for | |
| Spouses | |
Shigeko Kubota (久保田 成子,Kubota Shigeko) (August 2, 1937 – July 23, 2015) was a Japanesevideo artist, sculptor andavant-garde performance artist, who mostly lived in New York City.[1][2] She was one of the first artists to adopt the portable video camera SonyPortapak in 1970,[3] likening it to a "new paintbrush."[4] Kubota is known for constructing sculptural installations with a strongDIY aesthetic, which include sculptures with embedded monitors playing her original videos. She was a key member and influence onFluxus, the international group of avant-garde artists centered onGeorge Maciunas, having been involved with the group since witnessingJohn Cage perform in Tokyo in 1962 and subsequently moving to New York in 1964.[5] She was closely associated withGeorge Brecht,Jackson Mac Low,John Cage,Joe Jones,Nam June Paik, andAy-O, among other members ofFluxus. Kubota was deemed "Vice Chairman" of the Fluxus Organization by Maciunas.[6]
Kubota's video and sculptural works are mainly shown in galleries. Her use of the physical television as a component of her work differs from other video artists of the 1960s who made experimental broadcast programs as a move against the hegemony of major networks.[7] Kubota is known for her contribution to the expansion of the field of video into the field of sculpture and for her works addressing the place of video in art history.[8] Her work explores the influence of the technology, and more specifically the television set, on personal memory and the emotions. Some works for example eulogize while also exploring the presence of the deceased in video footage and recorded images such as herDuchampiana series, the videoMy Father, and her later worksKorean Grave andWinter in Miami which eulogize her husbandNam June Paik. Kubota's sculptures also play with ways in which video footage and sculptures utilize videos to evoke nature, as in herMeta-Marcel,Bird, andTree series' and inRiver, andRock Video: Cherry Blossoms.[9]
Kubota was born as the second oldest of four girls to a family of monk lineage associated with aBuddhist temple inNiigata Prefecture, Japan, where she lived throughWorld War II.[10] She described herself as "of a religious Buddhist family," and familial connections to monastic life would inform laterZen concepts in her work.[11] Because her father was a Buddhist monk, Kubota had often witnessed funerals as a child and spent time alone, supposedly playing with ghosts in a temple room where fresh bones were stored. She drew on these vivid memories of death in her video art.[12]
Her parents appreciated the arts and supported their children in studying them, despite the expectation of women to work as part of the productive force at the time. Her maternal grandfather was acalligrapher and landowner who encouraged his daughter and his granddaughters to pursue various arts. Kubota's mother, for example, was one of the first female students at what is now the Tokyo National University of the Arts and Music. Art brought Kubota to Tokyo as a young adult as well: during her high school years, Kubota met an enthusiastic art teacher who urged her to apply to theTokyo University of Education, where she earned a degree in sculpture in 1960.[5]
Even early in her career, Kubota won recognition for her skill but was also noted as pursuing unconventional approaches. One of her paintings of flowers won an award in the well-regarded Eighth Annual Exhibition of Nika-kai (1954), one of the major juried-exhibition art associations. Though this painting is no longer extant, Kubota's high school teacher praised it for a "uniqueness characterized by strong lines and brushstrokes that do not appear to be executed by a girl."[5] Perhaps because of such boundary transgressing, Kubota's aunt, Chiya Kuni—an established modern dancer—introduced her to the Tokyo-based experimental music collectiveGroup Ongaku. Members ofGroup Ongaku includedTakehisa Kosugi,Chieko Shiomi, andYasunao Tone, who were all experimenting with tape recorders, noise music, and avant-garde performances in the early 1960s. This musical interest, in turn, led to her first encounter withJohn Cage andYoko Ono atTokyo Bunka Hall in Ueno when Cage was on tour across Japan in 1962. Kubota observed how untraditional the tour performers, including Yoko Ono, were in destroying every convention of music; she thus thought to herself that if Cage's music was accepted in New York, she should be accepted there, too. Kubota found affinities between herself and Cage because she felt unappreciated in the Japanese art world due to her unconventionality.[5] But Ono also became an important contact for Kubota and other Japanese artists looking to learn more about American avant-garde movements such as Fluxus. Kuboto visited Ono's apartment in Tokyo in 1963 and saw Fluxus event scores, which inspired herself and other members ofGroup Ongaku to send their own event scores to George Maciunas, the founder of the Fluxus movement, in New York.[5] Through this introduction, Kubota became involved in the Fluxus circle and began experimenting with a wider range of media, from text scores to performance.[13]
In December 1963, Kubota had her first solo show, "1st Love, 2nd Love..." at Naiqua Gallery in Tokyo, an alternative/avant-garde space inShinbashi, Tokyo,[4] housed in a former office of internal medicine (naiqua means internal medicine),[14] in which she "piled up fragments of love letters from the floor up to the ceiling of the gallery" and covered the stack with a white cloth, creating an unstable mound. "Visitors were forced to work their way up the pile of paper scraps" in order to see an array of welded metal sculptures placed at the top.[15] The exhibition, which might be considered environmental sculpture now as inspired by Allan Karpow's notion of "environments," was accompanied by a score: "Make a floor with waste paper which are all love letters to you. Spread a sheet of white cloth on the floor. Skin your lips by yourself. Kiss a man who has a mustache in the audience."[14] Through the gallery Kubota met and collaborated with avant-garde collectives such asHi Red Center and Zero Jigen (Zero Dimension).[16] However, Kubota noted difficulty in getting recognition and write-ups in newspapers and art magazines in Japan and later recalled that she "realized that female artists could not become recognized in Japan."[15]
Later that year, in 1964, she moved to New York after exchanging letters withGeorge Maciunas about the New York Fluxus scene. In a letter to Maciunas (written just before her departure for New York), Kubota expressed a mixture of anxiety and hope: "In every day I was very worry which is better to be in Tokyo or to be in New York in order to live as an only artist. But now I made up my mind to go to New York... It's my only hope to go to New York in order to live as an artist, but for you, it's no mention without the biggest trouble to you. But I'd like to touch, to see and feel something by touching a group of Fluxus and living myself in New York."[17] She would be lifelong friends with George Maciunas until his death in 1978.[18] Her live-work space inSoHo, which she occupied from 1974 to her death in 2015, was situated in a neighborhood at the center of the avant-garde art scene, due partially to Maciunas's Fluxhouse Cooperative project for affordable artist housing and studio spaces. Kubota's proximity to influential collaborators from this community included her immediateMercer Street neighbor, the experimental artist Joan Jonas.[16] She also actively maintained close relationships with Japanese avant-garde artists in Tokyo, especially bringing the activities of Hi Red Center to the attention of Maciunas and other Fluxus members.[19] Kubota's first show in New York was on July 4, 1965, at Cinemateque as part of the perpetual Fluxfest, where she performed her famous "Vagina Painting." After this exhibition, Kubota exhibited her works regularly in New York. Kubota continued her studies atNew York University and theNew School for Social Research (1965–1967). She studied at the Art School of theBrooklyn Museum 1967–1968. In 1972 to 1973, Kubota came together with artistsMary Lucier and Cecilia Sandoval, and the poetCharlotte Warren in the feminist collaborative troupe White Black Red & Yellow (sometimes also rearranged to Red White Yellow & Black as a play on the "red, white, and blue" of the American flag) to put on three "multimedia concerts" atThe Kitchen in New York.[16]
Kubota taught at theSchool of Visual Arts, and was video artist-in residence atBrown University in 1981; at the School of theArt Institute of Chicago in 1973, 1981, 1982, and 1984; and at the Kunst Akademie in Düsseldorf in 1979. She also helped to coordinate the first annual Women's Video Festival atThe Kitchen in 1972.[20] From 1974 to 1982 Kubota served as the first (and only) video curator, and one of the few women or people of color, associated with theAnthology Film Archives.[16] Kubota also collaborated with Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI) to present Video Art Reviews at Anthology, further strengthening what EAI's director Lori Zippay called the "alternative ecosystem."[21] In addition to studying, managing Fluxus events, and exhibiting internationally, Kubota also worked as a New York-based international critic for the Japanese art magazineBijutsu Techo (Art handbook), for which she took photographs and wrote articles on the New York art scene until 1971, thus fostering artistic dialogues across linguistic, geographic, material, and gender divides.[22] In 1991, the American Museum of Moving Image in New York presented a nearly thirty-year survey of Kubota's work.[16]
She died in Manhattan, New York on July 23, 2015, at the age of 77 from cancer.[23] Upon her death, Norman Ballard was named as executor of her estate in order to continue promoting her work and legacy. Ballard is an artist and long time close collaborator with her late husband, artistNam June Paik, as well as a close friend of the Paik family. He became the founding director of the Shigeko Kubota Video Art Foundation, located in her historic home in SoHo. Seven years after she passed, theMoMA and theMuseum of Contemporary Art in Tokyo had exhibitions dedicated to the life and art of Kubota. The MoMA exhibition,Liquid Reality, showed her most acclaimed video sculptures, while the Tokyo exhibition,Viva Video!, displayed works that had never been in an exhibition.[24] Kubota emphasized eulogy in many of her artistic pursuits and was similarly eulogized by museums and the foundation created in her name.
Kubota was one of the first artists to commit tovideo art andnew media, long before its status as an art form was widely recognized.[11] Her early work withFluxus centered around 1965, after moving to New York City, before she moved on to explore new artistic directions and video.[5] She was known for early video making on theSonyPortapak, one of the first compact individually-operatedcameras, as previous models required whole crews. She described filming with this camera in gendered terms: "Portapak and I travelled all over Europe and Japan without male accompaniment. Portapak tears down my backbone, shoulder, and waist. I travel alone with my Portapak on my back, as Vietnamese women do with their babies."[11] Her first experiments with a video camera were manipulated close-upself-portraits, made using the newly invented Paik/Abe Video Synthesizer while she, Paik, and artist Shuya Abe were teaching artCalArts in 1970-71. Among these tapes wasA Day at the California Institute of the Arts, which evidence suggests was retitled asSelf-Portrait and incorporated into the sculptural workVideo Poem (1970–75).[11] From these works, Kubota quickly pivoted to what would become her signature "video diary" approach, through which she documented personal and artistic journeys, added text or audio commentary, and integrated early image-processing techniques likechroma keying,matting, andcolorizing to create a "fusion ofvideo documentary andvideo art, aiming at the higher dimension of consciousness in style and semantics."[25]
In the 1970s, Kubota also pioneered the medium ofvideo sculpture by extending her videos into three-dimensionalplywood,sheet metal, andMylar forms, in collaboration with friend and artist Al Robbins. With these constructions, Kubota aimed to challenge widely-held notions that video art was "fragile," "superficial," "temporal," and "instant," as compared to more established art forms. Her sculptural practice also resisted video's association withmainstream media and corporate technology, by camouflaging the television's hardware. She stated, "I used plywood to cover the TV box, partly because I didn't want people to know what brand the TV was; I just wanted them to see it as a sculpture."[4] Some of her first video sculptures pay homage toMarcel Duchamp, an artist with whom she felt a deep kinship and met twice in her life.[22] Named withinDuchampia series,Duchampia: Nude Descending a Staircase (1976) was proposed for acquisition by curatorBarbara London after being included as part ofThe Museum of Modern Art'sProjects series for emerging artists. It entered the museum's collection in 1981 under the Department of Painting and Sculpture, as MoMA's first acquisition combining video and sculpture.[11]
In the late 1970s, in parallel with herDuchampaniana series, she began making video sculptures that foreground nature through the combination of what she termed (in a likely nod to Marshall McLuhan) "cool forms," creating volumetric sculptural objects referencing the contours ofmountains,rivers, andwaterfalls, with "hot video," in which her imagery of these features is colorized, fragmented, repeated, or totally deconstructed.[26] Kubota's use of video embedded inlandscape andtopography becomes a means to contemplate the self. Kubota utilized especially the landscapes of theAmerican West as an infinite and untamed expanse that recall thenomadic movements of people, including herself as a Japanese artist living in America and moving through the international art world. Works such asThree Mountains andRiver use constructed sculptures to evoke a sense of place and employ video integrations as a way to expand the horizons of both landscape and sculpture.[27] Her interest innature as a central theme in her video and sculptural work continued with sketches of Land art interventions that she termed "structural video" works, which would have embedded video monitors in the mountain ridges ofArizona andNew Mexico. These works, though unrealized, illustrate the artist's imaginings of a synthesis of nature and technology, a lifelong subject of interest.[11] In the 1990s, Kubota also drew on ecology to produce installations of work likeWindflower (Red Tape) (1993),Videoflower (1993),Windmill II (1993), andBird II (1994), andVideotree (1995) which take the form of twisted trees and flowers of metal embedded with small video monitors.[26] At the same time, Kubota's hybrid objects transgressed boundaries between video sculpture andMinimalist sculpture, resembling at times Donald Judd's plywood, rectilinear volumes while simultaneously at odds with monocultural, male-dominated American art historical trends of the movement.[16]
Kubota's relationship to the formal qualities of video extended beyond the physical camera and took varied forms. In a text about her workRiver, for example, Kubota drew connections between water and video: "A river is replicated in video in its physical / temporal properties and in its information-carrying and reflective 'mirror' qualities... Rivers connected communities separated by great distances, spreading information faster than any other means... Charged electrons flow across our receiver screens like drops of water, laden with information carried from some previous time (be it years or nanoseconds)."[8] In preparatory sketches for works such asThree Mountains andNiagara Falls I, Kubota expresses the formal properties of video asmalleable, like ink washes and line drawings. Having worked in video since its beginnings as an art form, her technical skills in adding texture and depth to her tapes included editing them on playback decks, incorporating computer-generated graphics, overlaying subtitles, reediting, reiterating, and resequencing footage.[16] Later work explores memory processes in relation to video, both in its technological imperative to store and access recorded events and in its self-reflexive connection to autobiography.
In 1977, Kubota married the artistNam June Paik[28] after divorcing her first husband, the composerDavid Behrman, in 1969.[29] After Paik suffered a series ofstrokes in 1996, Kubota dedicated a huge amount of time and energy to managing his work and life, becoming his primary caregiver, and effectively slowing production of her own work at the time. They remained together until Paik's death in 2006. Despite Kubota's persistent and pioneering impact on the development of video art, especially video sculpture, her contributions have long been eclipsed within art historical discourse by Paik. While the couple collaborated throughout their thirty-year marriage, Kubota recounts that the concept of video sculpture was her own: "In the beginning, Paik only used the television set, just like that, bare, without anything. Then I told him that a television by itself is not a work. It could be found in any store, he needed to add something. He didn't listen to me, so I decided to do it myself, in the late Sixties. Video Sculptures with all kinds of materials, with super 8 and moving images from films."[30]
Whether Kubota's work can be described as feminist has been a topic of interest in the scholarship and presentation of her work.[31][32] Kelly O'Dell writes that Kubota's references toMarcel Duchamp,Jackson Pollock, andYves Klein, are used by feminist critics to describe Kubota's work as problematizing the interest of theWestern canon in masculine rendering, to reclaim art for women.[33] However, Kubota does not characterize her works as feminist. In an interview with theBrooklyn Rail, she said, "People can put me in the Feminist category all they want, but I didn't think I can make any real contribution other than my work as an artist."[4] But artists who are largely considered feminist may not personally identify as such for a variety of reasons.Judith Butler argues that the label of feminism works against the integration of a larger spectrum of ideas relating to gender and identity into the discourses about art by encapsulating feminist arguments as a separate strain of history or art history.[34] Despite Kubota's reluctance to declare a feminist stance, she was frequently identified as a feminist by her close friends and colleges, such as Mary Lucier, who stated that Kubota was "a radical feminist, unhappy about her status as a woman artist in Japan and easily angered by the slightest perceived injustice".[35] She did not explicitly include feminist themes in her artwork, but rather allowed her own views on gender issues, femininity, the male gaze, and the intersection of the body with technology and nature, to influence her artwork.[36]
Feminist art historians have also emphasized Kubota and other women artists' estrangement and marginalization from the Fluxus movement.[37] Midori Yoshimoto writes that Kubota'sVagina Painting, which is her most explicit work about gender in art, was poorly received by her peers involved in Fluxus, similarly to ways in which Yoko Ono andCarolee Schneemann's performances were considered "un-Fluxus" because of their strong emphasis on feminine subjects. Still, in a 1993 exhibition catalogIn the Spirit of Fluxus, art historianKristine Stiles writes that Kubota'sVagina Painting "redefined Action Painting according to the codes of female anatomy," adding, "The direct reference to menstrual cycles seems to compare the procreation / creation continuum lodged in the interiority of woman with the temporal cycles of change and growth she experienced in her own art and life after moving from Japan to the United States."[38] However, the radicalism of this artwork is overshadowed by the circumstances of its creation, as in an oral interview for MoMA’s C-MAP global research project, " she recalled that she was “begged to do” the piece by two male artists—Maciunas and Nam June Paik", making her most famous artwork a product of the pressure she received from men to eroticize her art, rather than her efforts as a woman to create artwork in a male-dominated space. Afterwards, she never created an artwork like 'Vagina Painting' again.[39] There is also interest in the overshadowing of Kubota's career by her husband Nam June Paik's as an issue of thegender biased art world.
In addition to Kubota's co-founding of the feminist video collective Red, White, Yellow, and Black, scholars suggest Kubota's video art coincided with the rise of second-wave feminism. As curator and critic Emily Watlington suggests, “unburdened by history and thus patriarchal conventions, its capacity for live, instant feedback allowed women to image themselves rather than be depicted by men.”[40] The collective used the experimental tool to their advantage, paving their way into a novel art form.
While in Tokyo, Kubota became friends withYoko Ono, who was at the time involved in Fluxus and the New York art scene. Kubota and other members ofGroup Ongaku and began working on poetic "scores" and sending them to Yoko Ono's contact, George Maciunas, in New York. Midori writes, "the termHappenings was more popular thanevents in Japan, so Kubota called these poetic works 'Happenings.' Their form and poetic content, grew out of influences from Fluxus scores, such as instructions by Ono."
Kubota's first exhibition in 1963 titled,1st Love, 2nd Love... exhibited these Happenings as conceptual works. The exhibition was at Naiqua Gallery, analternative exhibition space in Shinbashi, Tokyo. Kubota exhibited tons of crumpled paper, which she called 'love letters' mounted on the walls and ceiling and covered in white cloth, which she called aBeehive. Her scores of instructions,A Beehive 1,A Beehive 2, andA Blue Love I, andA Blue Love 2 were included in the exhibition. The happenings and other printed items were sent toGeorge Maciunas who printed them in Fluxus publications.
Vagina Painting was performed at the Perpetual Fluxus Festival in New York in July 1965.[41][42] In the performance, Kubota assumed a crouching position over a sheet of paper on the floor with a brush affixed to the crotch of her underwear and painted abstract lines in blood red paint.[43] The work is often cited[44] as a female rejoinder toJackson Pollock'saction ordrip paintings and toYves Klein's use of the female body as a painting tool in hisAnthropometrics of the Blue Period (1960) in which female models covered in blue paint imprinted their bodies in white paper on a floor. The red paint is reminiscent of menstrual blood, but also can be juxtaposed with Jackson Pollock's ejaculatory motion of his paintings. Kubota placed the paintbrush at the site of phallic lack, which breaks into a new type of female empowerment. The strokes of the paintbrush recall calligraphy, a reference to her cultural heritage.[45] The work has been associated withfeminist art, although Kubota never publicly expressed if she considered the work feminist or not. The work was largely criticized by the predominantly male Fluxus milieu but was later lauded as a historic act of feminist performance art.[11]
InInto Performance: Japanese Women Artists in New York, Midori Yoshimoto notes the possible relationship with Kubota's work andhanadensha ("flower train"), a geisha trick that including using their vaginas to draw calligraphy by inserting paintbrushes into the body. Kubota's vertical stance over the surface on which she paints could reference the masculine tradition of calligraphy drawing in Japan as well as the whole-body method of Abstract Expressionist Jackson Pollock.[46]
This series of works spans from the 1960s to 1981 and includes documentaries that Kubota filmed when she metMarcel Duchamp personally in the 1960s, and sculptural homages to Duchamp created after his death.
InVideo Poem (1976), Kubota's self-portrait is displayed on a small monitor that viewers can see through a vulva-shaped opening of a purple bag. A fan, placed inside the bag to keep the equipment cool, added pulsating movements. The bag had been given to her by her first boyfriend, Takehisa Kosugi, whom she used to support by working three jobs.Video Poem challenges male authority by her use of her ex-boyfriend's bag.[45]
This series references Marcel Duchamp's wood-framed'Fresh Widow'. This series includes four separate video works which are projected behind a plywood box with glass windows framing a twenty-four inch monitor.
Consists of three monitors suspended screen-down over a crescent shaped metal structure filled with water. The videotapes playing on the monitors reflect in the water and the structure.[47] Describing the moving images inRiver, Kubota states, "Once cast into video's reality, infinite variation becomes possible... freedom to dissolve, reconstruct, mutate all forms, shape, color, location, speed, scale... liquid reality."[8] It was first shown at theWhitney Museum of American Art. It was restored in 2017 by the Shigeko Kubota Video Art Foundation, and installed in 2018 at MIT, and then SculptureCenter in New York, for the exhibitionBefore Projection.
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