Junko Chodos (born 1939) is a contemporary artist born and educated in Japan and residing in the United States since 1968. Her works represent a wide variety of techniques and styles, ranging from pencil, pen, and
collage
Collage (, from the french: coller, "to glue" or "to stick together";) is a technique of art creation, primarily used in the visual arts, but in music too, by which art results from an assemblage of different forms, thus creating a new whole. ...
, to works done with
acrylic.
Chodos has had solo exhibitions featured at the Tokyo Central Museum, the
Long Beach Museum of Art, the
USC Pacific Asia Museum, the Fresno Art Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Religious Art in St. Louis, and numerous other museums and galleries in Japan and in the United States.
Life and career
Junko Chodos was born Junko Takahashi in Tokyo, Japan, in 1939. Her experience during World War II affected her later life and art.
She grew up in a household where
Shinto, Buddhism and Christianity were strong influences. She was a member of the first post-war generation of "commoners" allowed to attend the
Gakushūin, the Imperial school.

Chodos studied at Tokyo's
Waseda University from 1963-1968. She graduated with a
BA in Art History and Philosophy. At Waseda, she studied under Professor Shigeo Ueda, noted translator of
Martin Buber into Japanese, and took an interest in his writings of philosophy.
After leaving Japan in 1968, Chodos migrated to California, calling herself a "spiritual refugee". She then attended the
State University of New York, Buffalo
The State University of New York at Buffalo, commonly called the University at Buffalo (UB) and sometimes called SUNY Buffalo, is a public research university with campuses in Buffalo and Amherst, New York. The university was founded in 1846 ...
. Later, in 1971 she married Rafael Chodos,
a lawyer and author in biblical studies and the aesthetics of
fine art.
In an article in the Winter 2003 issue of ''
CrossCurrents'', Chodos wrote:
To seek justice, to be courageous, to be ethical in other words, to choose rational universal standards over loyalty towards the group is to be a traitor in Japan, and these individuals break the biggest taboos of the totalitarian society. I experienced these aspects of Japanese society as a form of persecution and as a threat to my own integrity. That is why I left Japan and became a spiritual refugee.
As Junko Chodos developed her style. she coined the term ''Centripetal Art'' to describe the philosophical basis of her art, which she defined as art created by an artist who strives towards her center and encounters divine presence there.
Exhibitions and Publications
Chodos' solo exhibit from 1995 "In the Forest of Amida Budda" was described by William Wilson in the Los Angeles Times as a "small but impressive solo."
This exhibition featured works that appeared similar to Japanese scrolls. Chodos painted on top of Mylar with inks and acrylics to get a unique texture for these works.
Chodos published ''Metamorphoses: The Transformative Vision of Junko Chodos'', a catalog of the one-person exhibition of the art of Junko Chodos at the Long Beach Museum of Art in the Fall of 2001. The book featured full-color high-quality reproductions and five critical essays. The works included a selection from collages to mylars included in her "Esoteric Buddhism" series, inside
CD jewel boxes. The book won "Best Art Book of the Year - First Prize"" from Independent Publisher in 2002.
In 2005, the Museum of Contemporary Religious Art in Missouri presented a 30-year retrospective of her work titled "Junko Chodos: The Breath of Consciousness". The exhibition title referenced a recurrent image in her work: the lungs. The exhibition included complex drawings of roots and dead flowers and works from a 1991 series, "Requiem for an Executed Bird".
[Saint Louis University, 18 March – 31 July 200]
Junko Chodos: The Breath of Consciousness
/ref> In the same year, the Fresno Art Museum Council of 100 gave Junko Chodos The Distinguished Woman Artist Award. The award is given to a woman who "has spent thirty or more years in the studio and has created a unique and prestigious body of work."
Her influences include Paul Klee, Willem de Kooning, Matthias Grünewald, Albrecht Dürer
Albrecht Dürer (; ; hu, Ajtósi Adalbert; 21 May 1471 – 6 April 1528),Müller, Peter O. (1993) ''Substantiv-Derivation in Den Schriften Albrecht Dürers'', Walter de Gruyter. . sometimes spelled in English as Durer (without an umlaut) or Due ...
and Japanese calligraphy
also called is a form of calligraphy, or artistic writing, of the Japanese language.
Written Japanese was originally based on Chinese characters only, but the advent of the hiragana and katakana Japanese syllabaries resulted in intrin ...
, as well as the authors Rainer Maria Rilke
René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (4 December 1875 – 29 December 1926), shortened to Rainer Maria Rilke (), was an Austrian poet and novelist. He has been acclaimed as an idiosyncratic and expressive poet, and is widely recogni ...
, Herbert Read
Sir Herbert Edward Read, (; 4 December 1893 – 12 June 1968) was an English art historian, poet, literary critic and philosopher, best known for numerous books on art, which included influential volumes on the role of art in education. Read ...
and Martin Buber. In 2010, Chodos was named a Fellow of the Society for the Arts, Religion and Contemporary Culture.
Centripetal Art
Junko Chodos has termed her art as "Centripetal" in nature. '' The New Republic'' defines centripetal artists as artists "whose preoccupation is directed to a dramatization of their accidental or willful individualism". A centripetal painter "believes in self-illumination, improvisation, speaking for himself alone", they "look to museums when not at mirrors". Junko Chodos herself defines it as "art created by an artist who strives towards her center and encounters Divine Presence there, where people go beyond the barriers of ethnicity, gender, religious denominations, dogma, and of confined ideas of blood and soil.
In 2008, Junko and her husband formed the Foundation for Centripetal Art to spread its ideas.
References
Further reading
* Ellens, J. Harold. "Why on Earth does God Have to Paint? Centripetal Art." ''CrossCurrents'' 61.2 (2011): 271-275.
External links
*
Centripetal Art
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chodos, Junko
1939 births
Living people
20th-century American painters
20th-century American women artists
20th-century Japanese women artists
21st-century American women artists
21st-century Japanese women artists
Artists from Tokyo
American women painters
Religious artists
Modern painters
Japanese emigrants to the United States
American artists of Japanese descent
Painters from California
University at Buffalo alumni