
Haikus, Modernism and Stanton MacDonald-Wright
Date and Time
Saturday Dec 14, 2019
10:00 AM - 5:00 PM MST
August 24th 2019 - June 30th 2020
Tues, Wed, Thurs, Fri: 10am - 5pm
Sat: 9am - 2pm
Location
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art 650 North 1100 East, Logan, UT 84341
Fees/Admission
Free admission.
Website
Contact Information
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art
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Description
Stanton MacDonald-Wright’s “Haiga Portfolio” (1965-1966) blends Eastern and Western influences, pairing vibrant modernist paintings with haikus written by some of Japan’s most influential poets.
The term “haiga” refers to a style of Japanese painting by haiku poets, whose poems are known for their brevity and simplicity. Each of the ten prints that compose the “Haiga Portfolio” have a corresponding haiku.
The “Haiga Portfolio” exemplifies the 20th century modernist movement Synchromism, cofounded in 1913 by MacDonald-Wright and Morgan Russell. The movement sought to arrange color in the same way that sound is composed in music and is considered the first American avant-guard movement to be accepted internationally. Seventy-five years old at the time of the portfolio’s creation, MacDonald-Wright employed the use of energetic, swirling shapes coupled with dense, vivid colors orchestrated in the modernist style and the rhythm of Synchromism.