Popular Protest in Post War Japan: The Antiwar Art of Shikoku Gorō

Exhibiting Paintings

Though not part of the art establishment, Shikoku situated his expressive work in relation to canonical art and respected local poets and painters. From the Our Poems days in the late 1940s and early 1950s, Shikoku was active in building networks with artists, organizing non-juried exhibits, publishing with like-minded writers in journals. On the right page above the monochrome painting of ruins, he quotes a poem by much admired Toge Sankichi about the violence of the bomb. The facing page shows the rebuilding of a hospital; Shikoku notes his use of yellow to suggest wheat and dots of red to highlight human activity in this more hopeful image.

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