Current fair ends in
$950
Taro Yammamoto 1919-1993
Abstract expressionist on handmade paper -Kozo/Washi type Japanese paper- signed and dated 1957 . matted and unframed.
Taro Yamamoto was part of the Abstract Expressionist movement in New York City during the 1950s. Born in Hollywood, California in 1919 , he descended from a long line of Shinto priests and lived in Japan from the age of eight to receive a traditional Japanese education. There, he began painting and decided to make art his life.
He returned to the United States in 1936 and began studies in cubism at Los Angeles City College. In 1941 he joined the U.S. Army and served during WWII. After being discharged from service, he enrolled the the Art Students League in 1950. There he worked with Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Vaclav Vytlacil, Byron Brown, Reginald Marsh and Morris Kantor. He also won a four-year scholarship to study at the Hans Hofmann school in New York. The next year he traveled to Europe under a Edward G. MacDowell Traveling Fellowship where he studies in Stuttgart, Germany with Willy Baumeister. He also exhibited at Gallerie Huit in Paris. In 1954 Yamamoto was invited to a residency at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire. There he worked with Stuart Davis, Milton Avery, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko developing a unique abstract expressionist style. Later in life, his style moved to hard-edge painting.
Yamamoto had an extensive exhibition career including the Stable Gallery, Art Students League, Krasner Gallery, Westerly Gallery and Riverside Museum in New York; the Provincetown Art Association & Museum, Guild Hall in East Hampton, Miami Museum of Modern Art, the Dayton Art Institute, the University of Minnesota, Wellfleet Art Studio, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Parrish Art Museum in Southampton along with many others.
PO Box 4051
Greenwich, CT, 06830
United States
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