Kazuko Miyamoto
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Kazuko Miyamoto | |
|---|---|
| 宮本 和子 | |
| Born | 1942 |
| Education | Contemporary Art Research Studio, Arts Student League, Pratt Graphic Art Center |
| Known for | String Constructions (1972–1979) |
| Movement | Minimalism, Postminimalism, Performance art |
Kazuko Miyamoto (宮本 和子, Miyamoto Kazuko, born 1942) is a Japanese-born American visual and performance artist based in New York City, associated with feminist art, minimalism, and postminimalism. Miyamoto's artistic style combines formalist minimalism with a foregrounding of the artist's hand to insert a subtle and ironic commentary on the confident masculinity of male-dominated minimalist art.[1][2] Miyamoto has been called "a preeminent feminist figure of minimalism"[3] and "a major figure of the Minimal and post-Minimal art scene in New York."[2]
Kazuko Miyamoto was born in wartime Tokyo, Japan in 1942.[4] In 1962, she began studying at the Contemporary Art Research Studio (Gendai Bijutsu Kenkyūjo) in Tokyo, graduating in 1964.[5] That same year, Miyamoto emigrated to New York, where she began four years of study at the Arts Student League, graduating in 1968.[4] She then studied printmaking at the Pratt Graphic Art Center for a year.[5]
In 1969, Miyamoto began a longtime association with the American minimalist artist Sol LeWitt, working for many years as his personal assistant.[6] The two met when a fire alarm called them outside of the Lower East Side artist loft building in which they were both living at the time.[3] In addition to being her employer, LeWitt also became Miyamoto's friend, promoter, and art patron.[6] Over several decades, the two artists would have significant influence on each other as they sought to destroy the canvas and break out of the frame of traditional artworks.[7]