Noguchi Museum launches digital archive about the globe-trotting artists life and career

Arts

Isamu Noguchi, The Letter (1939) Kevin Noble/Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York/ARS

The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum in New York has launched a digital archive of 60,000 objects related to the life and career of Noguchi (1904-1988), including letters, photographs, manuscripts, project records and architectural drawings that shed light on the Japanese-American artists thinking and his collaborations.

At the same time it has updated its online catalogue raisonné for the artist, expanding it to around 5,000 works spanning six decades. The catalogue, which first went online in 2011, now reflects deeper research into Noguchis lesser-known early work of the 1920s and 1930s, when he was mostly a figurative artist. “A lot of people dont know that figurative works were his bread and butter before he moved toward abstraction after 1940,” says Brett Littman, the museums director.

Among the discoveries is Black Boy from around 1934, a large figure that Noguchi carved from a single piece of ebony wood that was acquired by George Gershwin and has remained with his family ever since, says Alex Ross, the managing editor of the catalogue raisonné. Littman says the catalogue also boasts a bibliography of each article in which a featured work has been discussed.

Isamu Noguchi, Black Boy (Figure), from around 1934 Ben Blackwell/© Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum, New York/ARS

Among the riches of the archive are over 28,000 photographs documenting Noguchis art, exhibitions and studios as well as the people he met and worked with on his international travels. “Hes like Zelig: he keeps popping up in all the intellectual and social circles in New York and around the world,” the museum director says. “Its like a whos who.”

Users can search the archive in categories like photography, manuscripts, architectural material, business and legal documents, Noguchi Fountain & Plaza (the artists design company) and press-related items.

Among the more compelling manuscripts that visitors can peruse online, Littman says, is I Became a Nisei, an article that Noguchi wrote while living in an internment camp for Japanese-Americans in 1942 in Arizona. A tool allows users to zoom in on the typewritten words on 12 pages as well as changes made with a pencil.

“When people ask me why I, a Eurasian sculptor from New York, have come so far into the Arizona desert to be locked up with the evacuated Japanese from the West coast, I sometimes wonder myself,” Noguchi writes. “I reply that because of my peculiar background I felt this war very keenly and wished to serve the cause of democracy in the best way that seemed open to me.” Littman said that Noguchi visited the camp to offer his services as an architect and endedRead More – Source