“The key to successful collaborations is a passion for creating great works.”
—Hitoshi KidoHitoshi Kido’s illustrious career in printmaking spans decades and continents, including collaborations with iconic artists from Robert Rauschenberg to James Rosenquist. With expertise in intaglio, lithography, and photogravure, Kido has risen to the forefront of his field, masterfully balancing tradition with innovation. After discovering his passion for printmaking at Musashino Art University, he began his career at the legendary print publishers Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE) in New York. Rising to the role of Master Printer, Kido spent nearly a decade at ULAE working alongside renowned artists, including Jasper Johns, Carroll Dunham, and Kiki Smith.
Hitoshi Kido and John Lund working at ULAE, Park Avenue, New York, 1984. Image courtesy of Universal Limited Art Editions.
Returning to Tokyo in the early 2000s, Kido established KIDO Press Gallery in Shinkawa, Cho-ku, in 2003. Merging creativity and technique to form a haven for contemporary printmaking, the studio has grown to become KIDO Press Gallery, regularly holding special exhibitions of contemporary art. Its program showcases both established and emerging Japanese artists while introducing leading Western artists to Japanese audiences. Through dedication to collaboration, KIDO Press Gallery continues to push the boundaries of printmaking, nurturing a vibrant gallery space where artists and skilled printers bring ambitious projects to life.
Hitoshi Kido.
Our February Editions sale will feature printer’s proofs from Kido’s time as a Master Printer at Universal Limited Art Editions (ULAE). On the occasion of the sale, Kido spoke to Phillips about his career trajectory, creative process, and top tips for artistic collaboration; the interview can be read here.
Satire and sexuality meet Carroll Dunham's vivid brush in the artist's often large-scale fantasy worlds. His eye-popping cartoonish veneer takes a cue from Philip Guston while his primitive "visual language" of faceless figures continues a long line of tradition—think back to Paul Cézanne and Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
Though Dunham jumps between abstraction, figuration, pop, surrealism and cartoon, his works almost exclusively center on the subject of women's sexuality. He also favors painting, though he has delved into prints, works-on-paper and sculpture. His paintings can be seen as contemporary variations on nineteenth-century portraiture of women bathing, injected with similar concerns of those classical and early modernist artists.
1991 Wood engraving in colors, on Saunders paper, with full margins. I. 23 1/4 x 31 3/8 in. (59.1 x 79.7 cm) S. 31 1/8 x 38 1/2 in. (79.1 x 97.8 cm) Signed, dated and numbered 'Printer's Proof 1/2' in pencil (the edition was 38 and 6 artist's proofs), published by Universal Limited Art Editions, West Islip, New York (with their blindstamp), unframed.