Details
NARA YOSHITOMO (B. 1959)
Untitled
signed Nara '98 on lower right
colored pencil on paper, framed
1078 x 8 in. (27.6 x 20.3 cm.) paper
Literature
The Yoshitomo Nara Foundation, Yoshitomo Nara: The Works, digital, ongoing, (illustrated, no. YNF7107).
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Lot Essay

A hooded child stands alone. Sweat beads across the brow, narrowed eyes fixed forward, fists raised in stubborn resolve. Beneath the slight body appears the word Mumps, forming the ground from which the figure rises. A few deliberate lines convey a fragile yet tense presence.
The subject evokes a familiar childhood ailment yet functions as metaphor for inner agitation. The weakened yet combative child reflects Nara’s recurring psychological self-portrait, shaped by solitary years spent drawing and listening to music. The angry child motif appears here through tightened gaze, perspiration, and raised fists as text and image merge. The pared graphic manner recalls underground zines and quiet rebellion.
Today Nara Yoshitomo ranks among the most visible figures in global contemporary art. His deceptively simple young protagonists extend beyond the studio into exhibitions, publications, collectibles, fashion, and music culture. Within these figures viewers recognize echoes of teenage angst, vulnerability, and defiance.
Viewed through a broader interpretive lens, the figure may invite comparison with earlier visual languages embedded in Japanese art. The concentrated gaze and sharply defined expression recall, in spirit, the physiognomic intensity of ukiyo-e portraiture such as the theatrical faces of Toshusai Sharaku. A comparable ambiguity appears in Noh masks, where subtle shifts of angle transform emotion from anger to restraint.
Folk imagery offers another point of resonance. The simplified head and condensed torso suggest talismanic forms such as Daruma, long associated with perseverance and resolve. In a different register, historical depictions of warabe (child figures) in premodern painting often present youth with unexpected emotional complexity rather than sentimental innocence.
Through several deliberate strokes, Nara’s solitary child gathers multiple associations. Punk defiance, classical physiognomy, and folk symbolism converge within a figure that appears delicate yet determined, standing with small fists raised against the world.

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