•  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
  •  Installation Shots From: Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
    Gaiety Is the Most Outstanding Feature of the Soviet Union
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Current Exhibition

SELECTED WORKS BY Yasumasa Morimura

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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait - After Greta Garbo 1

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
Everybody loves a dame. And Morimura just loves to be one! In this series of self-portraits Morimura convincingly slips into the roles of legendary silver screen goddesses, from Audrey Hepburn to Ingrid Bergman (and it doesn't stop there - he's also been art historical icons such as the Mona Lisa and Renoir's busty barmaid!). But Morimura is more than just art's most famous drag queen. Dealing with issues of cultural and sexual appropriation he is constantly exploring ideas of image consumption, identity and desire: Can Brigitte Bardot be as innocently flirtatious with angular Japanese features? Would Marilyn Monroe be as sexy if she was Japanese - and a man? And where does the line lay between Garbo's neurotic reclusivity and the paranoid expression of the down right freaky? In his photos Morimura lives out his impossible dreams of being 'other', playing the role of Asian agent provocateur infiltrating Western collective consciousness: becoming the women most lusted after, making them even more exotic.
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait - After Greta Garbo 2

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait - After Ingrid Bergman

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait - After Marilyn Monroe

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait - After Sylvia Kristel

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait after Brigitte Bardot 1

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 34.5 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait after Liza Minelli 1

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 29 cm
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Yasumasa Morimura
Self-Portrait/After Audrey Hepburn 1

1996

gelatin silver prints

44 x 29 cm

OTHER RESOURCES

artfacts.net
Additional information on Yasumasa Morimura

the-artists.org
Modern and Contemporary artist and art

morimura-ya.com
Official Yasumasa Morimura website

luhringaugustine.com
Selected Press on Yasumasa Morimura

assemblylanguage.com
Yasumasa Morimura at the Tokyo Museum of Contemporary Art by Monty DiPietro
"Art is basically entertainment," says Yasumasa Morimura, "Even Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci were entertainers. In that way, I am an entertainer and want to make art that is fun."

assemblylanguage.com
Yasumasa Morimura - Self Portrait as Art History

japaninc.net
Postmodern Irony
Nothing is sacred in Morimura's attack on fame, and that's most of the point. His question may be why are these images -- from the 17th-century Dutch paintings to contemporary Cindy Sherman photos -- deemed important or sacred? That he's becoming an icon himself is part of the play.

csulb.edu
Professor Kleinfelder's Art History website tutorial (California State University Long Beach). Short analyses of some Morimura works.

fundacion.telefonica.com
Extensive selection of some Yasumasa Morimura works

fundacion.telefonica.com - Art History: Yasumasa Morimura
Morimura affects this interference by inserting his own face into photographic copies of the paintings. Thus, he creates his own capricious art history, and even makes himself an ironic protagonist in it. Through this digital intervention into the models we can see fundamental icons of Western art such as the Mona Lisa, the Nude Maja and Las Meninas

shugoarts.com
Selection of some Yasumasa Morimura works

ufer.co.jp
Yasumasa Morimura, an artist who has been making self-portraits since 1985 by inserting himself into the masterpieces of art history, takes a new motif. That's an "Actress".

findarticles.com - Yasumasa Morimura at Luhring Augustineby Nancy Princenthal
In his most extravagant exercise of borrowed identity to date, Yasumasa Morimura created a series of hybrid self-portraits modeled on works by Frida Kahlo. Morimura has been inserting himself into simulations of other artists' paintings (as well as actresses' movie stills) since the mid-1980s, and the more care he takes to achieve fidelity, the more fantastic his work becomes.

metropolis.japantoday.com
Yasumasa Morimura: Los Nuevos Caprichos
A Japanese artist brings Goya’s satire into the 21st century
Some of our most enduring images of artists dave been their own self-portraits, be it those of Leonardo, Dürer, Van Gogh or Frida Kahlo. Since painters in the Renaissance managed to establish a place for the genre in European art, artists have returned to it again and again as a way to explore the age-old question of identity.