Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Abstract artwork with concentric circles, red background, wavy lines, and sandy texture.

Takako Yamaguchi: My name is Takako Yamaguchi.

I have no interest in spiritualism or naturalism. I'm interested in seascape as a genre.

Narrator: Yamaguchi is especially interested in paintings that were made in the United States before the Second World War—paintings that fell decidedly out of favor when ideas of pure abstraction came to dominate the art world. She describes her own painting as a kind of deliberate move back from that. 

Takako Yamaguchi: It’s in a sense: abstraction in reverse. I went back from abstraction to somewhere in between abstraction and then to have some kind of realism. I collected over the years graphic designs or fabric patterns. It's kind of superficial patterns, things like that. And then I applied those into my paintings, which will read as waves, the blade reads as clouds, and things like that.

And then those particular series that we are looking at here share the rigid and artificial dead center horizon line in all of these paintings. And then the upper half is a sky, and then the bottom half is the ocean. I do not have any bone in me to have some kind of expressionistic applying of the paints.


Takako Yamaguchi, Issue, 2023. Oil on canvas, 42 × 50 in. (106.7 × 127 cm). Collection of the artist; courtesy Ortuzar Projects, New York. © Takako Yamaguchi. Photograph by Gene Ogami

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