Frieze Masters

Frieze Masters

Chester Rd London, NW1 4NR, United Kingdom Thursday, October 6, 2016–Sunday, October 9, 2016 Preview: Thursday, October 6, 2016

photography for apn by kiyoji otsuji

Kiyoji Otsuji

Photography for APN, 1953

Price on Request

untitled by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Untitled, 1988

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untitled by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Untitled, 1988

Price on Request

bronze e.v. by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Bronze E.V., 1994

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bronze e by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Bronze E, 1994

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bronze c by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Bronze C, 1994

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bronze i by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Bronze I, 1994

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the oblique 4 (white) by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

The Oblique 4 (White), 1998

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danpen by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Danpen, 2001

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disappearing by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Disappearing, 1986

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drum ii by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Drum II, 1986

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continuation 2 by yoshishige saito

Yoshishige Saito

Continuation 2, 1987

Price on Request

Frieze Masters features more than 130 leading modern and historical galleries from around the world, showcasing art from the ancient era and Old Masters to the late 20th century.

Yoshishige Saito at Frieze Masters

Annely Juda Fine Art is pleased to present a solo exhibition of work by the Japanese artist Yoshishige Saito (1904 - 2001) at Frieze Masters, 2016. The exhibition will include two large-scale sculptures and a selection of wall sculptures and reliefs by the artist, spanning from 1966 to right up to his very last work.

Yoshishige Saito is recognised in his native Japan as one of the great abstract sculptors of the twentieth century. His teachings during the 1960’s and early 1970’s at Tama Art University, Tokyo had a great influence on a generation of Japanese artists leading, importantly, to the development of the Mono-ha movement that emerged in Tokyo at this time and which has garnered international attention in recent years. Saito is considered of great significance to this pioneering art movement which included artists such as Lee Ufan, Nobuo Sekine, Katsuro Yoshida, Susumu Koshimizu, Koji Enokura, Kishio Suga, Noboru Takayama and Katsuhiko Narita. Instead of making representational artworks, these artists explored often basic materials and their properties by creating simple arrangements with minimal artistic intervention.

Saito had been largely influenced by European and Russian art of the early 20th Century, especially the Russian Constructivists. By the 1930’s, he had started to make plywood relief sculptures. In keeping with Constructivist principals, he saw these works not as ‘a relationship between pictorial form and background’ but existing as objects in their own right. After the Second World War (during which most of Saito’s works were lost or destroyed), he began to incorporate large planks and discs of painted wood into his work. The results were larger scale sculptural installations, which Saito continued to make throughout his career, such as ‘Continuation 2’ (1987), which is part of our presentation at Frieze Masters.

In 1957 Saito won the prestigious New Artist’s Prize in Japan, and this exposure lead to his later inclusion in the Venice and Sao Paulo Biennales. He was the subject of numerous museum shows and was first shown at Annely Juda Fine Art in 1983.

Saito was “a compelling figure in the historical relationship between European and Japanese modernism” and we are pleased to show these important works at Frieze Masters.