Keiichi Tanaami / Courtesy of Nanzuka
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Keiichi Tanami: Adventures of Memory, The National Art Center, Tokyo, 2024 / Installation view photo: Michiko Yamamoto.
Time Out says
Born in Tokyo in 1936, Keiichi Tanaami is a pioneer of pop art in Japan. Though his ultra-vivid, cartoon-esque creations in assorted media have long been widely acclaimed, and exhibited at such major institutions as the Art Institute of Chicago and London’s Tate Modern, right now Tanaami’s profile is higher than ever. The still-active veteran is currently represented by hip Tokyo gallery Nanzuka, he collaborates with the likes of Adidas and Yohji Yamamoto, and his work is undergoing a major positive reappraisal by the art world’s tastemakers.
Tanaami’s late-career surge in popularity is crowned by his first major career retrospective, taking place at one of his home city’s most prestigious art museums. Across the venue’s expansive galleries, consistently retina-popping work traces the artist’s progression from commercial designer – he was the first art director of Playboy magazine’s Japanese edition – to a leading figure in the country’s underground art scene.
Across paintings, collages, installations, sculptures, film, animation and more, Tanaami’s work shares a degree of spirit with Western pop artists. Simultaneously evident, though, is a visceral understanding of Japan’s unique wartime and postwar history, derived from the artist’s lived experience. The 1967 screen print ‘No More War 1’ echoes the pacifist sentiment of many young Japanese in that era, while ‘Drama of Death and Rebirth’, a 2019 canvas, is a psychedelic hellscape punctuated by fire from US fighter planes. Bringing things right up to date is Tanaami’s 2024 work for Japanese rock band Radwimps.