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Keiichi Tanaami, Eye Ball Great Adventure, 2014

Keiichi Tanaami

Eye Ball Great Adventure, 2014

Nanzuka

Keiichi Tanaami, a pioneering Japanese Pop artist known for his psychedelic and often provocative works, has died at 88. The artist’s death on August 9th, due to complications from myelodysplastic syndrome and a sudden subarachnoid hemorrhage, was confirmed by his Japanese gallery, Nanzuka.

Born in Tokyo in 1936, Tanaami experienced the devastation of World War II firsthand, which influenced his work throughout his entire career. Tanaami later attended Musashino Art University, graduating with a design degree in 1958. In school, he became absorbed in the American cultural influences that permeated post-war Japan. Early on in his life, the artist began designing posters opposing the Vietnam War and recording covers for bands, including the Monkees and Jefferson Airplane. By 1975, he became the first art director for the Japanese edition of Playboy.

In the 1960s and ’70s, Tanaami crafted a distinct visual language that combined elements of American Pop art with traditional Japanese motifs, such as yokai (characters in Japanese folklore) or images from traditional ukiyo-e woodblock prints. His work from this period, noted for its psychedelic colors and surreal imagery, often commented on cultural and social issues happening worldwide.

“Tanaami lived through Japan’s turbulent postwar period as a true creative, and on many occasions found himself on the verge of life and death, not only through his childhood experiences of war, but also through his battles with illnesses such as colitis, tuberculosis, and cancer," Shinki Nanzuka, founder of Nanzuka, wrote in the artist’s obituary on the gallery’s website.

Tanaami’s chronic health problems influenced his art throughout his life, particularly in 1981 when he was hospitalized for tuberculosis. The hallucinations he experienced inspired a shift in his work towards more serene, yet still vividly colored, imagery.

“Tanaami had remarkably sublimated even these painful life experiences into works of art, continuing to actively pursue his artistic practice until his final moments,” Nanzuka said. “In the latter part of his life, he devoted himself not only to his own creative endeavors but also to nurturing younger generations of artists.”

A celebrated artist in Japan at the time, Tanaami joined Kyoto University of Art and Design as a professor in 1991. There, he worked with a new generation of Japanese artists, including Tabaimo. Meanwhile, the artist’s global recognition steadily rose throughout the next three decades. He showed at Sikkema Jenkins & Co. in New York, Corbett vs. Dempsey in Chicago, Almine Rech in Paris, and Karma International in Zurich, among others. In 2022, Venus Over Manhattan presented “Manhattan Universe,” a solo exhibition of Tanaami’s work, and announced its joint representation of the artist with Nanzuka.

A retrospective of Tanaami’s work, “Adventures in Memory,” is currently on display at the National Art Center, Tokyo. His first comprehensive retrospective in the United States, “Memory Collage,” is scheduled to open on November 24th at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami.

Tanaami’s work is held in prestigious collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Yokohama Museum of Art.