Okanoue Foam
Okanoue Foam
Okanoue Foam
This document was originally published in Foam Magazine #15, the images mentioned in the text are
http://www.foammagazine.nl/index.php?pageId=9&foto=43
Toshiko Okanoue(b.1928) started making photo-collage while she was studying fashion drawing in
1950.During the next 6 years she created over 100 works and did her solo shows in Tokyo in 1953 and
1956, but she stopped making them after the marriage in 1957. In 1967, she returned her home town in
Kochi and has lived there since then. Her works have been highly acclaimed since the late 1990s and
collected in public institutions such as the The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, Tokyo
Metropolitan Museum of Photography and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.Both of her
monograph,”Drop of Dreams’(2002 and portfolio, “The Miracle of Silence”(2007) were published from
Nazraeli press. Okanoue is represented by The Third Gallery Aya in Osaka, Japan.
Mika Kobayashi(b.1973) is a photo critic and has been writing and translating the books on photography.
Recently she has been involved with the organizing of the exhibition, “Heavy Light: Recent Photography
and Video from Japan” held at International Center of Photography in New York. She is going to
undertake the research of Japanese photography collection at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
One of her book is “Shashin wo Yomu Shiten(The Viewpoints of Reading Photographs)”, published from
Seikyu-sha in 2005.
Since the late 1990s the photo-collage works of Toshiko Okanoue have been ‘rediscovered’ through
exhibitions and in publications. Her monograph Drop of Dreams: Toshiko Okanoue 1950-1956 was
published in 2002 by Nazlaeri Press and some of her works were included in an exhibition, The History
of Japanese Photography, held at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and its accompanying catalogue.
Her works have gained recognition for their importance to postwar photography and the surrealist
movement in Japan. Her works had been buried in oblivion for nearly forty years, largely because of the
course her life took. After throwing all her energies into making over 100 photo-collage works in the first
half of 1950s, she married the painter Kazutomo Fujino and ceased working as a photographer. Most of
her works were created in her mid-twenties, and they clearly reflect the sensitivity of the age. Many
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Toshiko Okanoue: Between the Layers of Dreams
Text by Mika Kobayashi
women in Japan in those days were obliged to quit their careers after the marriage.
Toshiko Okanoue was born in 1928 and grew up during the War in the Pacific. After the war she learned
dressmaking at a vocational school and then studied design at Bunka Gakuin, a small art school in Tokyo.
Under the influence of one of her classmates she began to make collages, though at the time she knew
little about the history of art, including even the surrealist movement from which the idea of photo-
collage emerged. She regarded her technique of making pictures as a form of ‘hari-e’ (‘hari’ means
pasting and ‘e’ means a picture in Japanese), a traditional Japanese technique of making pictures by
In 1952 after meeting the poet Shuzo Takiguchi her vision broadened dramatically. Takiguchi was a
leading figure of the surrealist movement in Japan and the organizer of Jikken Kobo (Experimental
Workshop), an avant-garde artists’ group. Impressed by the quality of her collage works, he introduced
Okanoue to the works of Max Ernst, whose approach had a decisive influence on her. Takiguchi
organized two solo exhibitions of her works at the Takemiya Gallery in 1953 and 1956. For the invitation
Happy New year! Miss Okanoue is not a painter, she is a young lady. Working by herself, she
cuts up illustrated magazines to make collages that depict her very dreams. The resulting album is
a contemporary version of Alice in Wonderland. Please come and see for yourself.
As can be seen from his introducing her as a young lady instead of as an artist Okanoue’s making of
collage works was regarded as an outcome of involvement with her own fantasy rather than a skill or a
technique. And by describing the body of her work as a contemporary version of Alice in Wonderland,
Takiguchi seems to have intended to portray her as a little girl who had wandered by accident into an
imaginary world. In other words, what Takiguchi discovered in her works and was curating were new
ways of seeing and interpreting the contemporary world that was increasingly saturated by the printed
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Toshiko Okanoue: Between the Layers of Dreams
Text by Mika Kobayashi
Okanoue found the motifs for her works mainly in U. S. magazines such as Life and Vogue which she
bought from secondhand bookshops in Tokyo. Many of these magazines had been left behind in Japan
after the Allied occupation of 1945-1952. The 40s and 50s were the heyday of photojournalism and these
magazines carried many articles and photo-essays, reportages as well as full-page advertisements richly
illustrated with photographs. For those who had undergone the poverty and hardship of the war, the
occupation and the postwar rehabilitation in Japan, the affluent world depicted in the advertisements and
the fashion plates seemed to be a world of fantasy, the very opposite to life in postwar Japan.
Since Okanoue was at that time studying to become a fashion designer, the pictures in Vogue
and other fashion magazines must have been fascinating and very attractive to her. The motifs that appear
in her works are of fashion models wearing elegant dresses and lingerie. In these pictures the contours of
the models’ bodies and dresses were emphasized by the effect of artificial lighting. By cutting out these
figures carefully with scissors and pasting them onto pages that depict different scenes Okanoue was
placing the models onto stage-like backgrounds and making them act as the characters in the stories, as is
indicated by titles like Ophelia (1955) and Leda in the Sea (1952).
The background scenes of these figures are seas, mountains, cities, streets, skyscrapers, interiors of
mansions and churches. Sometimes the background is combined with other scenes, inlayed through the
doors and windows of the buildings, thus adding further dimensions. For Okanoue, flipping through the
pages of American magazines and pasting the cutout pictures onto paper was a way of stepping into the
world of her dreams and fantasies. This is noticeable in The Nest of Angels (1952) where a woman flies
through a window to arrive at a dance party being held in an old castle. The irrationality and dreamlike
quality of the scenes is sometimes emphasized by the motifs being arranged in a such a way that they
appear to be floating in mid-air, as in Noon Song (1954), where insects and butterflies fly around the table
Headless Women
The fantasy worlds she created contain extraordinary aspects, enigmatic and sometimes disturbing,
particularly the removal of the women’s heads. One striking example is The Miracle of Silence (1952), in
which the head of a woman is detached and suspended from a parachute. A probable reason why Okanoue
often removed the heads of women was her experience of using headless mannequins for dressmaking
and the study of fashion design. Their heads are replaced with accessories, plants and animals, turning the
women into imaginary creatures. In Visit in the Night (1951), in which a mysterious woman floats with
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Toshiko Okanoue: Between the Layers of Dreams
Text by Mika Kobayashi
umbrellas against a foggy cityscape, her head supplanted by a fan. Replacing their heads with animals
and insects makes the women seem even more enigmatic and extraordinary. In Incubation (1955), the
face of a woman resting on a cushion is replaced by a butterfly and she holds the eggs on her lap. What
sort of creature is she going to hatch? In Fantasy (1953), a woman with the head of a horse is lying on the
floor of a gorgeous drawing room surrounded by three horses. In the same vein, in The Night of the
Dance Party (1954), the head of a woman in a ballroom is replaced by hands in gloves that appear to be a
creature such as a sea anemone. These irrational and absurd scenes might be read as her own fantasy with
a little twist of sexual desire. It is quite interesting to see that the image of fashion models, created as the
idealized commodities of the postwar consumer society were transformed into strange creatures charged
with highly wrought, complex emotions. The women even appear to take on and express the power which
has been concealed inside them. In Noblewoman (1954), an armless woman in long dress is standing in
front of a door. Her profile is almost covered by a big screw and she is about to break through the door
with the screw instead of opening it. Likewise, in A Trait Angel (1954), a woman appears with two hands
holding guns behind her wings. A man on the right seems to have been blown away by the woman’s shot.
Okanoue’s methods of creating her collage works were based on the exploration of scenes and things that
she could have known in postwar Japan only through magazines. The scenes she created in her works
show us her admiration for these things and scenes from the western world but also her impulsive desire
for something she could not have experienced in her own life. Between the complex layers of motifs we
can imagine what her desires may have been, not all that different from our own.
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