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Heavy Hand

TSURUOKA Masao

1949

A man sits with his head down, with his huge bloated hands thrown in front of him in an interior with bare concrete beams. Another huge hand is weighing heavily down upon his shoulders, ready to crush him at any moment, but his hronze-colored limbs, looking strong and suffused with undefeatable will for life, resists the formidable weight. This painting, which is said to have been inspired by the homeless taking refuge in the underground passageways in Uerio, is acclaimed as a masterpiece which aptly captures the spirtures oppression felt by the Japanese in the postwar era. Here the artist does not simply present the despair of the oppressed, but uses the Cubistic structures in the background as a symbol of the authorities, in which the Expressionistic living flesh is placed to stand for the human existence in bold struggle against the harsh environment. And it also symbolizes the life history of the artist himself, who through his years of poverty never gave up painting and formed the "Shinjinga-kai" group in rebellion against the wartime control on artists. Later, as a member of the "Jiyu Bijutsu Kyokai",Tsuruoka turned from figurative painting to abstraction employing human figures satirically reduced to signs and codes, but he never ceased to investigate the human existence within a reality that was full of injustices.


Profile

TSURUOKA Masao

1907-1979

Infomation

GenrePaintings
Material/techniqueOil on canvas
Dimensions130×97cm
Acquisition date1980
Accession number1975-00-0317-000

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