Japanese Prints and Paintings

Daniel Kelly - Page 2

Daniel continued to make more landscape and figurative prints. One print following the tradition of Tokuriki was "Children's Parade," showing a teacher and a row of children walking in the mist.

"When the Met collected that one, the curator told me that was the first woodblock print they'd added to their Japanese collection since the twenties;' Daniel Kelly says. "I began to realize maybe this was a good idea."

Daniel could easily have stayed with the traditional images of scenery near his Kyoto home and studio. Everyone loved his prints. But instead he continued to experiment with different mediums and different styles of printmaking and painting. He decided that "the basis of a good print is a good image, and the way to that is through drawing and painting." He had always done sketches, even of the people who came into his studio. In fact, he compares his quick sketches to a musician practicing scales. But he was led at that time to pursue watercolors with Brian Williams, who was already established as a watercolorist.

"Brian and I started painting landscapes together," Daniel says. "My purpose was to learn about natural color. Mort had taught me about color theory, but I didn't know how to paint a leaf. We painted landscapes a lot outdoors. We pushed each other, supported each other. We made a rule one day-throwaway the pencils.-He and I revere that moment. That was a turning point in our growth as painters."

Daniel describes his relationship with Brian further: "Brian and I will die telling each other every secret because we grew up together in our careers. We were both trying to figure it out. We talk about how art is made all the time."

Daniel Kelly created landscape woodblock prints from his watercolors and also began painting still-lifes.

"In the Gion Festival in Kyoto," Daniel says, "they hang out paper lanterns with an umbrella over them to protect them from the rain. Brian and I both painted a paper lantern. In a way, looking under that umbrella reminded me of looking up someone's dress." From that experience at the festival, Daniel drifted out of landscape and began painting lanterns. He became intrigued with these voluminous, hollow objects, and proceeded to eliminate more and more of the landscape background, focusing on the "big, fat lanterns" and the spaces between them.

About the same time, in the early 1980s, he felt compelled to go to New York to gain some exposure to contemporary art. He didn't want to be "just another landscape watercolorist." He was also concerned that the steps of woodblock printing had a tendency to "stiffen the image. It lost some of its fluid quality," Daniel explains. "On the other hand, lithography directly translates the drawn image. That appealed to me a great deal."

Consequently, Daniel's first lantern print was a lithograph. He worked directly with a printer who "made sure I didn't screw up." That lantern print was as successful as "Rolling In" had been, selling out the first weekend at CWAJ. Another print, "Buttercups," was also a big hit. It depicted children carrying the bright yellow umbrellas that make them visible to cars. CWAJ told Daniel that, at that point, he was the best-selling artist they had ever had.

Surprised again by his success, Daniel continued doing lantern lithographs. He began moving in closer to the image and incorporating other elements with the lanterns. In the manner of Franz Kline, whose work he had seen in Great Falls as a child, Daniel began "slashing in black" to incorporate expressive brushwork in the background of the lanterns. He also bought antique books in Kyoto, tore them up, and glued them onto the image.

"From the beginning, I decided I admire people who overcome obstacles," Daniel says. "In the printmaking process, I wanted to use a Dutch linen paper. The printer said, 'This won't print.' This intrigued me all the more. I started collaging a variety of papers underneath the image. Where the paper doesn't print, the paper expresses itself. It talks about itself. That interested me-more than looking like a photograph. I think the world likes this about my work."

Continuing to explore different types of subject matter, Daniel made a portrait of his father-a lithograph-that was intended as a gift on an upcoming trip to the United States. He brought one copy of the print with him to New York, and on the advice of a friend took his work to the Museum of Modern Art (MaMA), where he was given the standard sheet of paper directing him not to expect any comments or criticism from the staff. He sat for an hour before the curator came out. The print portfolio was taken from him, and he waited for another hour. Then he was asked to come to the back room, and all the prints except the portrait of his father were returned to him. "We really like this print.

Could we have it?" they asked. "No, you can't;' Daniel told them. He explained that it was the only print he had. They insisted that he send a copy as soon as he had printed it, and they sent a check as incentive.

"That made me think," Daniel said. "Why were they interested in this picture that was a fairly loose portrait of my dad? It didn't look like a lithograph-it's a painted lithograph [tusche-wash J. A lot of lithographs are drawn with a crayon. Also, it's somewhat abstract."

Other museums were beginning to recognize Daniel's talents as well. His father's portrait was collected by the New York Public Library and the Brooklyn Museum. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has one of his traditional images and a lantern print. The Smithsonian Institution and the Los Angeles County, New South Wales, British, and Cleveland museums have also collected his work.

Encouraged by MaMA's purchase, Daniel began an extensive series of portraits depicting family members and historical figures. Around the same time, he embarked on a series of large lithographs of New York, where he spent nearly four months of the year, and of Kyoto, where he resides. "Snowflakes I" and "Snowflakes II" show the contrast between the two cities. The large buildings of New York are contrasted with the rice fields of rural Kyoto. These two magnificent lithographs are examples of his finest work from this period.

Ever changing, Daniel moved into cement-block prints with a series entitled "Cream of the Crop." His father was a tile and marble contractor and as a boy Daniel had helped build swimming pools in the summers. Now he incorporated his knowledge of cement into his art. "They are made of sheets of plywood coated with cement," he explains. "I can carve down into the wood. I had some concrete relief on some of the woodblock prints, going back to one of the very first ones. I'd done that just for texture, like for the grasses. With 'Strawberries,' I made the whole print out of concrete relief. This is not something most people do, because they don't have the background in tile and marble."

One of Daniel's latest prints, "The Secret," is a combination of cement block, lithography, and hand coloring. It measures approximately six feet long by fourteen inches high. All of Daniel's prints from the last few years have some element of mixed media, as this one does. "You mix whatever you want. There's no purity in my thinking;' Daniel says.

Most of his lithographs have woodblock color plates on them, and many of his woodblocks include some lithography. He has collaged antique Japanese paper and gold leaf, and has used hand coloring extensively. He is certainly not daunted by a challenge.

"I get this idea and I want to see this thing. I really don't like it if I have a concept-it doesn't exist yet-and people say you're going to run into this and that problem. I want to slap those people out of my way. If there's a problem, I dig deeper. Painting is like war. I get in there and battle and fight. It's either me or the painting. One of us will win."

I enjoy working with Daniel because it's exciting and fun. I've come to enjoy his disorganized approach, which is so different from my own. Just to gather some of the information about him for this book, I had to call dozens of times to try to capture him in three different cities, in two different countries-between his dental appointments, his drives to the airport to pick up luggage he had stored, and his visits to friends and relatives.

I got an even closer look at Daniel's lifestyle while staying with him in his traditional Japanese home, which is outfitted with the latest technology. One of the most memorable parts of the visit for me was a long, hot bath in the tub that Daniel designed and built. I walked along the black stones strategically placed outside the tub to imitate a riverbed. After opening the sliding window, I laid back in the water to view the full moon and listen to the crickets in the Kyoto night air. The next day, I was amazed when all of the friends who dropped by Daniel's house took turns taking a bath!

Over the years, I've found that he is the type of person who gets things done at his own pace, in his own way. It has been very satisfying for me to watch the growth of an artist who does not produce his work for the market, but -rather according to what he wants to say.

From the beginning, I've also admired his unflinching trust in me. Even though some galleries had taken advantage of his trusting nature, he never passed on that mistrust to me. At the time I met Daniel, the Verne Gallery was very small. We had not yet done the important works-on-paper shows, and we were not located in a major city. Daniel was very laid back and didn't expect instant results.

I commissioned a woodblock print from Daniel in 1991, the year he married his wife Junko, a wonderful person who is very easy and comfortable with everyone. When Daniel showed his print "Junko" to his woodblock teacher, Tokuriki brought out prints of Japanese bijin (beauties) by such artists as Onchi, Goyo, and Shinsui. He said he felt Daniel should compare his creation to these masterpieces.

That same year, I introduced Daniel's work at the Works on Paper show at the Armory in New York. Many of the most important galleries in the world are invited to do the show each year. Most of the galleries are from such places as New York, Paris, London, and Munich. People are always pleasantly surprised to see a small gallery from Cleveland. Each year at the show, I watch people literally stop in the aisle to view one of Daniel's creations. Even in New York, they have never seen anything like it.

This reaction is partially attributable to the fact that Daniel's work has an immediacy about it, no matter the style or medium. For this, Daniel credits his sensei, Tokuriki.
"I studied sumi-e [black-ink painting] from Tokuriki, and that was philosophically important. He would kneel down and paint a bamboo. He'd move aside and tell me to paint it. He might make a comment or two. If I made a correction, he said, 'Don't correct it, do it again.' That immediate touch-the moment you're doing it-is important. Like throwing away the pencil-that came from sumi-e."

Through it all, Daniel remains down-to-earth about his success: ''I'm less romantic about art. I don't think you're born with a talent, that you have it or you don't. Through hard work and training you become who you are."

At the same time, Joshua Rome's description of his friend Daniel is very apt: "Daniel is definitely a real artist. He has vision, knowledge, and skill, and very few artists have all three. He really enjoys what he does-he gets this shit-eating grin [ninmarisuru] on his face. His stuff's alive!"

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Daniel Kelly was born in Great Falls, Montana and grew up in Idaho Falls. Before leaving for Japan over twenty five years ago, he spent $1.95 on the only art book he could afford. At the back of this small book by the woodblock print artist Tokuriki was an invitation, "if the reader of this book has a chance to visit Kyoto, feel free to contact the author."

Daniel Kelly Dance
Dance
Daniel Kelly I am not a Geisha
I am not a Geisha
Daniel Kelly Heaven' s Gate
Heaven' s Gate
Daniel Kelly Blue Lanterns
Blue Lanterns
Daniel Kelly Dragon Pearl
Dragon Pearl
Daniel Kelly Crisscross
Crisscross
Daniel Kelly Fish Out of Water
Fish Out of Water
Daniel Kelly Buttercups-08 (Painting)
Buttercups-08 (Painting)
Daniel Kelly Momo ( Peach)
Momo ( Peach)
Daniel Kelly Highfire
Highfire
Daniel Kelly Buttercups-08 (DVD)
Buttercups-08 (DVD)
Daniel Kelly Raymond Felix (Series: Cream of the Crop)
Raymond Felix (Series: Cream of the Crop)
Daniel Kelly Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope
Daniel Kelly Butter Cup
Butter Cup
Daniel Kelly Read All About It
Read All About It
Daniel Kelly Love at First Sight
Love at First Sight
Daniel Kelly Luna
Luna
Daniel Kelly Great Falls
Great Falls
Daniel Kelly Camellia
Camellia
Daniel Kelly Morning Calm
Morning Calm
Daniel Kelly Persimmons
Persimmons
Daniel Kelly Persimmon Sunrise
Persimmon Sunrise
Daniel Kelly Childrens Parade (Metropolitan Museum of Art Collection)
Childrens Parade (Metropolitan Museum of Art Collection)
Daniel Kelly What\'s Up (print)
What\'s Up (print)
Daniel Kelly April Sky- Kyoto
April Sky- Kyoto
Daniel Kelly Butter Cup (Painting)
Butter Cup (Painting)
Daniel Kelly First Softground
First Softground
Daniel Kelly Junko
Junko
Daniel Kelly What\'s Up (Painting)
What\'s Up (Painting)
 
 
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