The Painted Diary of Takuichi Fujii
By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Sept. 21, 2017
"High School Girl," by Takuichi Fujii, oil on canvas, Wing Luke Museum collection, photo by Richard Nicol, courtesy Washington State History Museum. |
Washington
State History Museum offers a rare opportunity to see the visual diary,
drawings and watercolor paintings of a Japanese-American held in the relocation
center in Puyallup and the internment camp at Minidoka, Idaho.
Takuichi
Fujii was a small businessman and well-known local artist in Seattle at the
beginning of World War II. Swept up along with his wife and two daughters, as
was almost every Japanese-American on the West Coast, he was confined in the
relocation center in Puyallup from May to August 1942, and then to Minidoka,
where he and his family were held until October 1945. A prolific artist, Fujii
documented the scenes and the life at both camps in a personal diary and in
watercolors and ink drawings. About 70 artworks from this time period and
including later works from when he lived in Chicago after the war, are on
display in two galleries at WSHM. The galleries are small, and the paintings
can be seen in a short visit, but visitors should linger long and attentively
over each work because they illustration a life lived during one of the most
horrendous events in American history, and because Fujii was an excellent
artist whose works demand attention.
In
the smaller of the two galleries we are given an overview glimpse into his art
before and after his wartime experiences. The earlier works are realistic and
simplified. In the later years he moved into more abstract work with his final
paintings being strong black-and-white abstract paintings in a style similar to
that of Franz Kline.
The
larger of the two galleries is dedicated to his wartime art, which was unknown
until they were rediscovered after his death by his grandson, Sandy Kita. These
drawings and paintings have never been shown publicly.
The
diary he began in the relocation camp at Puyallup is displayed in a closed case
but all of the nearly 400 pages can be viewed digitally.
Work
done before the war include self-portraits, pictures of downtown Seattle. There
is a portrait of his daughter titled “High School Girl” (1934-35) that shows a
strong influence of such painters as Cezanne and Braque and other forerunners
of cubism. The Seattle scenes and a painting of the Rock Island Dam on the
Columbia River. There are paintings from the beginning of the war showing
American citizens of Japanese descent reading the signs tacked to light poles
and fences announcing that they must report to the relocation center,
essentially that your life, your home and your business are over.
The
pictures from Puyallup and Minidoka are stark and simple. More of them picture
the camp buildings and the desert than the people. There are pictures of the
barracks and the latrines, the crowded train that took them to Minidoka, and
incident where they saw a rattlesnake I the desert.
“The
exhibition tells the story of Fujii’s individual will to persist, both as an
artist and a citizen, and provides a rare glimpse into exactly what that
experience was like,” said the museum’s director of audience engagement, Mary
Mikel Stump, who summed up the exhibition saying it is all about Fujii’s
individual experience. This critic would add that it is also about the talent
and dedication of an artist whose work parallels trends in art history from the
1920s and ‘30s through the 1950s.
Witness to Wartime: The Painted Diary of Takuichi Fujii, 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Tue.-Sat, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. third Thursday, through Jan. 1,
$5-$12, Washington State History Museum, 1911 Pacific Avenue, Tacoma,
888.238.4373
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