LIFE

Vibrant colors fill Bush Barn printmaking retrospective

Tom Mayhall Rastrelli
Statesman Journal

Decades ago when Yuji Hiratsuka of Corvallis was growing up in Osaka, Japan, he didn’t like math or science. As high school approached, he had to decide what to do with his life.

“We had a slightly different system than here. Schools were focused on a vocational aspect. It was more rigid. You have to make your decision early,” Hiratsuka said. “It’s not like here, when you get to college and many kids still haven’t decided on a major.

“My parents said, ‘You’re not good at the general education, so why don’t you do some other thing?’ ” Hiratsuka said.

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He enrolled in the fine arts program at the Osaka Municipal High School of Art and Industry, where he discovered his focus: printmaking.

“When you are 15 and you already have a major and lifelong occupation picked, it’s scary. But I don’t regret it. It’s good,” Hiratsuka said.

Hiratsuka went on to study art education at Tokyo Gakugei University and graduated in 1978. He built a 38-year career as a teacher, including his current tenure at Oregon State University that began in 1992. He’s a renowned artist whose intensely colored, intaglio printmaking is in museums around the world.

Printmaker Yuji Hiratsuka, professor of art at Oregon State University, works on an intaglio print. A retrospective of his career, “38 Years,” will be on exhibit Jan. 15 through Feb. 27 at the Bush Barn Art Center.

On Jan. 15, the exhibition “38 Years” opens at the Bush Barn Art Center. It will be the first retrospective of Hiratsuka’s career. The exhibition is curated by Salem artist Kathryn Cellerini Moore, who studied with Hiratsuka at Oregon State.

“He loves applying humor to his work,” Cellerini Moore said. She described Hiratsuka’s work as whimsical, satirical and full of symbolism. Hiratsuka utilizes a vivid palette to create imaginative and exaggerated figures inspired by Japanese, western and Victorian fashion, flora, fauna, anime, pop culture and traditional Japanese ukiyo-e prints.

"Wings" by Yuji Hiratsuka, 2012. A retrospective of Hiratsuka's career, “38 Years,” will be on exhibit Jan. 15 through Feb. 27 at the Bush Barn Art Center.

“The blending of eastern and western imagery is very much a reflection of how he sees the world. That’s a genuine place to be making art from,” Cellerini Moore said. “The way he recycles his imagery and still keeps it fresh is for me what keeps it interesting and inspires me as an artist.”

If you’re not familiar with intaglio printmaking, it’s a physically demanding process. Intaglio means to incise or cut. From his drawings, Hiratsuka etches figures, images and textures into 22-gauge copper plating to create troughs for the ink. Most of Hiratsuka’s pieces are 18 inches by 24 inches.

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Cellerini Moore said Hiratsuka’s method is unique because he uses one plate to print four colors — black, yellow, red and blue in that order — instead of using one plate per color.

“Between each color, he sands all of that work off the plate and prepares the areas for the next color. None of his work can ever be reproduced,” Cellerini Moore said. “It’s a taxing process. You have to get it right.”

Printmaker Yuji Hiratsuka

Hiratsuka uses washi paper, made from bark, for his prints. Between each color, the paper must dry for days. To complete one print from start to finish takes roughly one month.

”The way he’s able to derive colors from those initial primary colors is inspiring,” Cellerini Moore said. “It’s 38 years of practice that’s enabled him to control a process that is so finicky and temperamental.”

"TB" by Yuji Hiratsuka, 2015. A retrospective of Hiratsuka's career, “38 Years,” will be on exhibit Jan. 15 through Feb. 27 at the Bush Barn Art Center.

Printmaking is a demanding art, but Hiratsuka said some people still view it as lesser.

“There’s a hierarchy. Painting is best, drawing second and printing is third,” he said. “There are a lot of bad paintings and drawings. And a lot of good prints.”

If you’re unfamiliar with printmaking, Cellerini Moore hopes you’ll come to the exhibition.

“It’s important to go to these exhibits and show support for our living, working artist-teachers. Yuji is a phenomenal teacher, and he’s able to maintain a consistent and strong artistic practice,” Cellerini Moore said. “This won’t be his last retrospective. It whets the palate and makes you want to learn more.”

TRastrelli@StatesmanJournal.com, (503) 983-6030, facebook.com/RastrelliSJ and on Twitter @RastrelliSJ

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If you go

What: “38 Years” featuring the art of Yuji Hiratsuka

Where: Bush Barn Art Center, 600 Mission St. SE

When: Jan. 15-Feb. 27

Admission: Free

Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays and noon to 5 p.m. Saturdays-Sundays, closed Mondays

Information: (503) 581‑2228 or salemart.org

Related events

Art Talk with Yuji Hiratsuka and Kathryn Cellerini Moore: 10 a.m. Jan. 5

Fine Art Friday: reception from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Jan. 15; lecture by Hiratsuka and Cellerini Moore at 6 p.m.

Two more exhibits: “Emerging Artist: Debi Miller” and “Featured Artist: Ann Kresge,” Jan. 15-Feb. 27

Salem Art Association grants

Salem Art Association recently received grants totaling $158,300. The James F. and Marion L. Miller Foundation awarded a $140,000 grant that will be distributed over four years. The association will use this money to expand access to the arts, artist services, educational programming and community collaboration. The Reser Family Foundation awarded $8,300 to support art and history education to underserved elementary school students. The Robert D. and Marcia H. Randall Charitable Trust gave $10,000 to support the association’s Access Art Project.