Title
Strawberries
Artist
Year
c. 1985
Technique
color mezzotint
Image Size
11 3/4 x 13 5/8" platemark
Signature
pencil, lower right
Edition Size
71 of 100
Annotations
pencil titled in lower center, editioned in lower left; "D" in lower right corner next to embossed "HMK"
Reference
Paper
white BFK Rives watermarked wove
State
published
Publisher
HMK Editions
Inventory ID
20127
Price
$400.00
Description
A bunch of strawberries rests on the top of a carved marble plinth, emerging from a soft black background. Tomoe Yokoi presents these everyday objects like revered pieces in a museum, but she's given the berries unusually long stems and stripped the rest of the scene of any sense of connection to other objects, lending a veil of surrealism to the composition. It is not simply a still life, but a mysterious narrative left to the viewer to discern. Tomoe Yokoi was born in Nagoya, Japan in 1942. Her formal art studies began at Tokyo's Bunka-Gakuen, one of Japan's first women's colleges, and the first to offer a wide range of courses to women. The curriculum focused on traditional Western techniques and representational subject matter such as still lifes and landscapes. Following her graduation in 1964, Yokoi moved to Paris and studied intaglio printmaking with Stanley William Hayter at Atelier 17. While there, Yokoi perfected her the mezzotint technique - her preferred medium - expanding its parameters to include more complex images and subtle color nuances. In 1971, Yokoi moved to New York City where she worked and introduced her art to new audiences. She developed a unique style that combines and is a synthesis of her Japanese, Parisian and New York experiences.