Lisa Yuskavage and Yoshitomo Nara
Saturday, October 15th, 2011Back in 2000, I say a show of Lisa Yuskavage, at the Philadelphia Contemporary. Ever since then I have been following her work and I have been watching her progression. I have noticed that her art work is similar to some of the American style comic books. Her works remind me of “Love and Rockets,” “Strangers in Paradise,” or a few characters in “Heavy Metal.” Her work reminds me of the current Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara. Not because her work is similar to his, but because both artist are tapped into their own comic character culture. Yuskavage uses these comic images to create sensual characters that appear to have a narrative. Nara makes images base on manga character styles. It is my understanding that in Japan, 1/3 of all printed material has a cartoon characters. With that much saturation of imagery, it is no wonder that Nara, Murakami and other Japanese artists creating art with cartoon character, because their art reflects the culture. Both Yuskavage and Nara tend to differ from their Pop artist predecessors lifting directly from cultural images in that their works are usually filled with their own character creations. With Yuskavage’s and Nara’s characters having their own narratives, but at the same time making the viewer feel the familiarity of a style that is in the culture. Yuskavage and Nara are lifting style from popular imagery not just straight up lifting popular images. I think Yuskavage’s and Nara’s characters give more insight into the artist’s personal humanity and an insight in the broader culture. Where as someone like Warhol sacrificed his personal humanity for a broader abstract of reflection of just the culture and not the self. Yuskavage and Nara are using the personal experience and pop culture to create images and convey a subjective narrative.


