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Click image to enlarge
Takashi Murakami (Japanese, born 1962):
PUKA PUKA,
1999
Screenprint, 26 3/8 x 19 inches
MSU purchase, funded by the Office of
the Vice President for Research and
Graduate Studies, 2002.13.1

Click image to enlarge
Julian Opie (British, born 1958):
Gary, Popstar,
1998-99
Screenprint, 24 x 21 inches
MSU purchase, funded by the Kathleen D. and Milton E. Muelder
Endowment, 2002.10.2
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A springing, resilient line, bright, flat colors, the use of
shorthand communication devices, and a generally upbeat mood are
often clues that cartoons, comics, animation or popular illustration
have influenced an artist. This is true for the 27 contemporary
artists included in the exhibition Art in the 'Toon Age,
drawn primarily from the Kresge Art Museum's collection. Some
of these artists are well known while others are just beginning
to gain recognition.
For more than four decades 'toons and ads have inspired three
distinct generations of artists, whose birth dates range from
1928 to 1975. Largely unaware of others working along similar
lines, these artists working have been popping up in England and
France, Italy and Japan, Austria and America.
The first generation of these artists emerged during the 1960s,
influenced by drawing from the 1940s, animation from the 1950s,
and commercial art styles. Though parallel in time with Pop art,
they did not share Pop's interest in the content of these sources,
nor in appropriating the imagery. The ironies of Pop art are lacking
in this work, as is Pop's Minimalist dearth of emotionalism. This
"senior" generation developed their styles in the 1960s
and 1970s and includes Valerio Adami, Patrick Caulfield, John
Clem Clarke, Steve Gianakos, Red Grooms, Michael Craig-Martin,
Elizabeth Murray, Jim Nutt, Peter Saul, Roger Shimomura, and John
Wesley. They were encouraged by the uses Pop art made of their
beloved sources, but disinterested in the Pop idea of lifting
cartoons or ads into their paintings untransformed. What interested
them was the beauty of the drawing in 1940s and 1950s animation
and commercial art, its seeming effortlessness, and the distillation
process itself. They like to imply narratives, but leave them
to the viewer to write.
The 1980s "junior" generation includes Roger Brown,
Carroll Dunham, Floc'h, Jeff Koons, Micah Lexier, Takashi Murakami,
Jim Nutt, Julian Opie, Yoshitomo Nara, and Sue Williams, who tend
to create a more complex, multi-layered esthetic, but in a 'toon
or anime style and spirit. Sometimes they deal with personal,
political, or social issues, with gender and sexuality, death,
violence, or war. Their narratives are never simple despite appearances
and frequently quite elaborate. The debt they owe to the commercial
graphic artist remains as great as that of the earlier generation.
The "freshman" generation of the 1990s includes Laylah
Ali, John Chilver, Marcel Dzama, Inka Essenhigh, Arturo Herrera,
and Monique Prieto. These artists explore the esthetic pleasures
of painting without stressing comprehensible narratives. Only
Ali has a political agenda explored through her Greenheads
and Bluehead, cartoonishly-styled protagonists who enact
deeply disturbing playlets on the vicissitudes of African American
life.
The art in Art in the 'Toon Age ranges from
satire and send up to the sublime.Though it may look beguilingly
innocent, much of the work is formally and psychologically loaded,
both with compositional conceits and fictive possibilities. Visual
cliches are dignified through authoritative handling, and the
familiar is elevated by being treated as abstracted compositional
elements. These artists practice an informed conservatism chosen
with full knowledge of the alternatives. They embrace radical
new computer age processes and innovations while working within
what appears to be a traditional idiom. All of these artists clearly
love ads, comics, and packaging graphics. What they have done
is to transform commercial art into the finest of fine art.
An adjunct exhibition, The Story of 'Toons, is a selection
of historically relevant actual comic strips, original drawings
for them, reprints, books of Manga, and graphic novels. Story
of 'Toons provides an historical overview of comic and cartoon
culture from Krazy Kat to Chris Ware; it is mainly drawn from
Michigan State University Libraries renowned Russel B. Nye Popular
Culture Collections. Many of these comics are the sources of inspiration
for the artists featured in Art in the 'Toon Age.
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