Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Nakamura Hiroshi

Nakamura Hiroshi described the 1950s as a “civil-war era,” and he obviously had confrontations over the militarization of Japan in mind. He himself took both the Girard and Sunagawa incidents as subjects of his artwork, in two equally powerful but stylistically very different protest paintings. Militarization, however, was only one aspect of what Nakamura and his like-minded compatriots found disturbing and grotesque in post-occupation Japan. Commonly known as the “reportage painters” for their distinctive left-wing combination of realism and surrealism, these artists also called attention to social oppression and grievous poverty; to corruption, and the return of former militarists to high political positions; and to the “inhumane mechanism” of postwar society in general. (via)

Félix Labisse - Paintings


Artur Grottger - War Cycle (Wojna Cykl)

Come with me through the Veil of Tears
Comet

Draw Recruits
Farewell
Conflagration
Hunger
Betrayal and Punishment
People or Jackals?
Only Misery
Sacrilige
Humanity, Kin of Cain

Monday, February 11, 2013

Kilian Eng - Illustration