was a Japanese artist who worked in a variety of media, including photography and engraving.
Life and career
Ei-Q, whose early work was done under his real name of Hideo Sugita (, Sugita Hideo), was born in Miyazaki-machi (now Miyazaki City), Miyazaki Prefecture on April 28, 1911. In 1925 Sugita entered an art school in Tokyo to study western-style painting, and his criticism of western art started appearing in the art magazines Atelier and Mizue in 1927, in which year he also left the school. In 1930 he entered a photography school and from then on pursued both painting and photography and more particularly photograms, first experimenting briefly with these in 1930, then dropping them in pursuit of painting, and then returning to them in 1936.
Ei-Q was influenced by the Surrealist aesthetic and also published essays promoting photography as an art form independent of painting. This did not imply a rejection of painting, and he worked toward what in 1935 he termed photo-dessins, a fusion of photograms and paintings. A first collection of these, published in an edition of 40 in 1936 as Nemuri no riyÃ
« (, "the reason for sleep"), took him to the forefront of the Japanese avant garde. Akiko Okatsuka rates Ei-Q (as he had named himself in 1935), together with SutezÃ
 Otono, as standing out among the many Japanese exponents of photograms, unlike the majority in their ability to use them for expressive rather than merely playful ends. Ei-Q also contributed photograms and photography criticism to Photo Times. Later museum narratives, including the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum exhibition ', have situated this aspect of his interwar work within the wider milieu of avant-garde photography in Tokyo. (He also became an enthusiastic proponent of Esperanto at about the same time.)
Ei-Q set up the art organization JiyÃ
« Bijutsu KyÃ
Âkai () in 1937; this lasted until 1951.
Ei-Q was able to resume his work after the war and in 1951 set up the group Democratic Artists Association (, DemokurÃÂto Bijutsuka KyÃ
Âkai) in Osaka. Membership was by invitation only, but the idea was to promote the free expression of members, who included woodblock artists, designers, photographers and others. On Ei-Q's move from Osaka to Urawa later in the same year, the group set up a branch in nearby Tokyo as well; Eikoh Hosoe and Takeji Iwamiya then joined. The Association lasted until 1957, holding exhibitions of its works.
Also in 1951 Ei-Q started etching and lithography; he would continue exploring new art media until his death. He was also active in art education, in 1952 setting up SÃ
ÂzÃ
 Biiku KyÃ
Âkai ().
Ei-Q died on March 10, 1960.
Exhibitions
- "Ei-Q photo-dessins" (). 1936.
- "Ei-Q photo-dessins" (). 1951.
- "Dai ikkai TÃ
ÂkyÃ
 kokusai hanga biennÃÂre-ten" (, i.e. the first Tokyo international biennale of wood engravings). 1957.
- "Ei-Q kaiko-ten" (). 1970.
- "Modanizumu no kÃ
Âseki: Onchi KÃ
ÂshirÃ
Â, Ei-Q" () / "Traces of Light in Modernism: Koshiro Onchi, Osamu Shiihara and Ei-Kyu". National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, FebruaryâÂÂMarch 1997. The work of KÃ
ÂshirÃ
 Onchi, Osamu Shiihara, and Ei-Q.
- "DemokurÃÂto 1951âÂÂ1957: KaihÃ
 sareta sengo bijutsu" (). Museum of Modern Art, Saitama, AugustâÂÂOctober 1999.
- "Ei-Q no himitsu-ten: ÃÂto ni deau natsu" () vol. 2. Fukuoka Art Museum (Fukuoka), JulyâÂÂAugust 2000.
- "Ei-Q, Ay-O, Ikeda Masuo" () Sayama Shiritsu Hakubutsukan (Sayama), OctoberâÂÂDecember 2000. An exhibition of Ei-Q, Ay-O and Masuo Ikeda.
- "Urawa gaka to sono jidai: Terauchi ManjirÃ
Â, Ei-Q, Takada Makoto o chÃ
«shin ni" (). Urawa Art Museum (Urawa), 2000. ãÂÂCatalogue of the opening exhibition of the museum, on the painters of Urawa, and particularly ManjirÃ
 Terauchi, Ei-Q, and Makoto Takada.
- "Ei-Q foto-dessan-ten" () / "Ei-Q Photo Dessin". National Museum of Art, Osaka (Suita), OctoberâÂÂDecember 2005.
- "Ei-Q-ten" (). Kawagoe Gallery, February 2006.
- "Ei-Q to sono shÃ
«hen" (). Machida City Museum of Graphic Arts (Machida), JuneâÂÂSeptember 2008.
- "Ei-Q-ten" (). Kawagoe Gallery, September 2008.
Works in permanent collections
Works by Ei-Q are in the permanent collections of the following institutions:
Books by and of Ei-Q
- Ei-Q. Nemuri no riyÃ
«: Ei-Q-shi fotodessan sakuhinshÃ
« (. Geijutsugaku KenkyÃ
«kai, 1936.
- Ei-Q and Kiyomi Shimazaki (). DÃ
Âbanga no tsukurikata (. Tokyo: Mon Shoten, 1956. An introductory practical book about etching.
- Mitsuharu Yamada (). Ei-Q: HyÃ
Âden to sakuhin (). Tokyo: SeiryÃ
«dÃ
Â, 1976.
- Ei-Q-shi fotodessan-ten (. Fukuoka: Fukuoka Art Museum, 1978.
- Ei-Q-ten: Gendai bijutsu no chichi (). N.p.: Ei-Q-ten Kaisai Iinkai, 1979.
- SadajirÃ
 Kubo (). Ei-Q to nakama-tachi (). Kubo SadajirÃ
 Bijutsu no Sekai () 2. Tokyo: SÃ
Âbunsha, 1985. .
- Ei-Q to sono shÃ
«hen (). Tokyo: Yomiuri Shinbunsha, 1986. Catalogue of an exhibition, held at the Museum of Modern Art, Saitama and elsewhere, of the work of Ei-Q and his circle.
- Ei-Q foto-dessan-ten (). Tokyo: Asahi Shinbunsha, 1987. Catalogue of an exhibition of Ei-Q's photo-dessins.
- Ei-Q to sono nakama-tachi-ten (). Machida, Tokyo: Machida City Museum of Graphic Art, 1988. Catalogue of an exhibition held at Machida City Museum of Graphic Art in 1988.
- Ei-Q-ten: Yusai, foto-dessan, hanga (). Itami: Itami City Museum of Art, 1990. Catalogue of an exhibition of Ei-Q's oil paintings, photo-dessins and wood block prints held at the Itami City Museum of Art.
- Ei-Q sakuhinshÃ
« (). Tokyo: Nihon Keizai Shinbun-sha, 1997. . A collection of the work of Ei-Q.
- Hikari no kaseki: Ei-Q to fotoguramu no sekai (). Urawa: Museum of Modern Art, Saitama, 1997. Catalogue of an exhibition of Ei-Q's photograms.
- Modanizumu no kÃ
Âseki: Onchi KÃ
ÂshirÃ
Â, Ei-Q ) / Traces of Light in Modernism: Koshiro Onchi, Osamu Shiihara and Ei-Kyu. Tokyo: National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, 1997. Catalogue of an exhibition at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo of the work of KÃ
ÂshirÃ
 Onchi, Osamu Shiihara, and Ei-Q.
- Ei-Q no himitsu-ten: ÃÂto ni deau natsu () vol. 2. Fukuoka: Fukuoka Art Museum, 2000.
- Urawa gaka to sono jidai: Terauchi ManjirÃ
Â, Ei-Q, Takada Makoto o chÃ
«shin ni (). Urawa, Saitama: Urawa Art Museum, 2000. ãÂÂCatalogue of the opening exhibition of Urawa Art Museum, on the painters of Urawa, and particularly ManjirÃ
 Terauchi, Ei-Q, and Makoto Takada.
- Ei-Q kara no tegami (). Ei-Q Bijutsukan, 2000.
- Masaomi Sugita (). Chichi (). Miyazaki 21-seki Bunko () 27. Miyazaki: KÃ
Âmyakusha, 2000. . A book about Ei-Q by his son.
- Hirofumi Wada. Ei-Q, Shimozato Yoshio: renzu no avangyarudo (). Vol. 14 of Korekushon Nihon shÃ
«rurearisumu (). Tokyo: Hon no Tomo-sha, 2001. . On Ei-Q, Yoshio Shimozato, and surrealism in Japanese photography.
- Ei-Q foto-dessan-ten (). Suita, Osaka: National Museum of Art, Osaka, 2005. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the National Museum of Art, Osaka of Ei-Q's photo-dessins.
Notes
External links