Ray Yoshida


Raymond "Ray" Kakuo Yoshida was a Chicago artist known for his paintings and collages, and for his contributions as a teacher at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago from 1959 to 2005. He was an important mentor of the Chicago Imagists, a group in the 1960s and 1970s who specialized in distorted, emotional representational art.
Yoshida was born in Hawaii and returned there after 2005 when his health began to fail. He studied at the University of Hawaii, but was drafted into the army during the Korean War. He resumed his studies in Chicago, and received degrees from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Syracuse University.
His paintings are strongly influenced by comics and his personal collection of folk art and found objects. His collages are strongly graphic, placing "tiny, oddly shaped details of architecture, fabric, hairdos and other unidentifiable elements" in ordered rows of fragments and tiers. Critic Ken Johnson called his collages "formally captivating, dreamily strange and comically absurd." Both he and his work are referred to as enigmatic, mysterious, and witty.
As a professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Yoshida was an influential mentor to a great number of artists, including many of the Chicago Imagists, Barbara Grad, Paul Lamantia, and David Sharpe.

Works

Yoshida created paintings in the early 1960s, and developed the "comic collage" in the later years of this decade. He also made paintings that incorporated elements from the comics. During the 1960s as well he began to build his personal collection of objects and images by self-taught and folk artists, installing these at his home. In the early 1970s, he created works which often featured abstracted objects; his work from the mid-1970s to 1980s incorporated a stronger figural sense. Yoshida returned to comic collage pieces in the 1990s and early 2000s, and produced a series of oil paintings in his late years. Scamper, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art, is an example of the artist's comic collage paintings.

Exhibitions

Yoshida had his first solo exhibition in 1960 at the Middle Hall Gallery in Rockford, Illinois. His work was shown along with the Imagists in the exhibition "Don Baum Sez ‘Chicago Needs Famous Artists" at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 1969. From 1971 through the 1990s, his work was regularly shown at the Phyllis Kind Gallery in Chicago and New York City. A retrospective of Yoshida's art was held in 1998 at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, the Chicago Cultural Center, and the Madison Art Center in Madison, Wisconsin. His last solo exhibition was in 1999 at the Adam Baumgold Gallery in New York.
After his death, a retrospective exhibition was held at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago's Sullivan Galleries. In 2013, the exhibition "" at John Michael Kohler Art Center in Sheboygan Wisconsin, displayed Yoshida's personal collection of over 2600 objects and artworks which was donated to the Kohler Foundation after his death.

Collections

The , the Hawaii State Art Museum, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the , and the are among the public collections holding work by Ray Yoshida.
The of Ray Yoshida are now held at the Archives of American Art, part of the Smithsonian Institution.