
Matsumoto Shunsuke
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Prelude 34KB |
Landscape in Brown 30KB |
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Figure 21KB |
Profile Matsumoto Shunsuke was
Born April 19th, 1912 in Shibuya, Tokyo, under the name of
Sato. He spent his childhood in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture,
and in Morioka as well and in 1925 entered Morioka Middle
School. Funakoshi Yasutake was in the same grade. The same
year he entered school he caught epidemic cerebrospinal
meningitis and lost his hearing. As a result of his hearing
loss he began to have aspirations to becoming a painter and
in 1929 his third year of middle school he left school and
moved to Tokyo. While taking elective
courses at the Taihei Yogakai Institute, he became close
with Aso Saburo and Terada Masaaki. In 1935 he presented
works in the Fifth Nova Exhibition, and his work
Buildings was first accepted in the 22nd Nika
Exhibition. He continued presenting in the Nika Exhibitions
until 1943. In that time, as well as receiving an award for
Cityscape in the 27th Exhibition and being
recommended for the Nika society member for his Portrait
of the Artist in the 28th Exhibition, he also presented
Standing Figure (29th Exhibition) and many
others. He also participated in
the Kyushitsukai and became a member. In 1936 he got married
and changed his last name to Matsumoto, named his studio
Sogokobo and along with his wife Teiko, created a new
drawing and essay magazine, "Zakkicho". In opposition to an
article discussing wartime cooperation in the January issue
of Mizue Art Magazine, Matsumoto presented Living
Artists in the April issue. The same year he also opened
a joint exhibition with Yasutake Funakoshi at the Kawatoku
Gallery in Morioka. In 1943 he formed the Shinjin Gakai with
seven others, including Aimitsu, Aso Saburo, and Terada
Masaaki. This society opened three exhibitions. In post-war 1946 with the
widespread distribution of a piece of the "Questioning all
Artists of Japan", Matsumoto set up an artists' organization
and helped to revitalize the lost sense of community and
partnership among artists. In 1947, along with the members
of the Shinjin Gakai, he participated in the Jiyu Bijutsuka
Kyokai. In 1948 while working on two pieces, Woman with a
Sculpted Head and Building, for the Second
Bijutsudantai Rengo Exhibition sponsored by the Mainichi
Newspaper, he became sick and died in his home, Tokyo on
June 8th at the age of thirty-six. Matsumoto's works start
off in his early years in a style likened to that of
Modigliani, and in his later years his art is characterized
by delicate matiere and unemotional lines used to portray
city motifs in an intimate manner.
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