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Solitude in the Wisteria Garden,
Oil,
18" x 18", $8,000
Artist, Oil, 8" x 8", $2,500, miniature
Landscape Light, Oil, 9" x 9", $2,700
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Milt Kobayashi

There is a quiet sophistication in Milt Kobayashi's oil painted canvases,
summoning a pensive, ethereal feeling in the viewer. Kobayashi's subjects are
people from another time and place and, yet, they are strangely familiar. They
are urban dwellers lost in thought as they take a momentary respite from their
routine. Kobayashi's people are absorbed in the world of contemplation and
meditation - making the attractively aloof.
A third generation Japanese-American, Kobayashi was born in New York City,
soon after that his family moved to Oahu, Hawaii, and then ventured to Los
Angeles when he was eight. After receiving his B.A. in 1970 from the University
of California - Los Angeles, Kobayashi began working as an illustrator. However
he found his work, which was quite editorial in its nature, did not fit the
Los Angeles commercial art market. In 1977, Kobayashi returned to New York
City. After returning to New York, a casual visit to the Metropolitan Museum
of Art permanently altered Kobayashi's artistic direction and prompted a career
change. There he saw Velazquez's portrait Juan de Paraja.
He began studying the works of Whistler, Chase and Sargent, who were also
influenced by Velazquez. Strangely enough, it was through his study of Western
masters, especially Whistler, that Kobayashi became aware of Japanese art and "the
Japanese floating world of Edo". He began studying the 16th and 17th century
Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock print masters Hokasai, Sharaku and Utamaro. Ukiyo-e
is defined as "pictures of the floating world," depicting characters
in the constantly changing motions of life. The whole perspective of Japanese
art allures him - the patterns, color harmonies, use of negative space, and
primarily, composition and design.
Kobayashi has received two major awards: the National Academy of Design's
Ranger Purchased Award and the Allied Arts Silver Medal. His work has appeared
in Forbes, Fortune, and Reader's Digest magazines. In September of 1997, Kobayashi
was a featured guest artist at the Artist of America show in Denver, CO.
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