Takako Yamaguchi Biography

Takako Yamaguchi is a Japanese-born, Los Angeles-based artist whose singular paintings challenge the divides between abstraction and representation, Eastern and Western art, and what is celebrated or dismissed in contemporary art. Her works reclaim motifs and genres sidelined by Modernist orthodoxy, culminating in visually lush, conceptually rich paintings that have earned her inclusion in events like the Whitney Biennial 2024 and a major solo exhibition at MOCA Los Angeles.

Early Years

Born in Okayama, Japan in 1952, Takako Yamaguchi spent formative years moving between Japan, France, and the United States. She studied at International Christian University in Tokyo before earning a BA from Bates College in Maine in 1975 and an MFA from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1978. Yamaguchi settled in Los Angeles in 1978, where she continues to live and work.

Takako Yamaguchi Artworks

Yamaguchi’s practice centers on painting, drawing deeply from both Japanese visual traditions and Western artistic movements. Her approach blends pattern, decoration, and sentimentality—elements historically dismissed by Modernism—with a critical, poetic sensibility. She refers to her process as ‘abstractions in reverse’: moving from pure abstraction back toward illusionism and ‘semi-abstraction’, while mixing motifs such as the organic forms of Japanese decor, Renaissance allegory, and American Transcendentalism.

Seminal Series and Developments

Pattern and Decoration – Early Influences

In the late 1970s and 1980s, Yamaguchi was loosely associated with the Pattern and Decoration movement in the United States, synthesising Japanese textile motifs, Art Nouveau, and Mexican muralism to provoke dialogue about gender, identity, and the global history of art.

‘Innocent Bystander’ Series (1987–89)

A major suite featuring allegorical nudes—often referencing Lucas Cranach the Elder—amidst dreamlike landscapes. The series engages with Art Nouveau, Japanese screens, and Renaissance painting.

‘Smoking Woman’ Series (1990s)

Paintings revisiting Art Deco themes, often featuring reclining Asian women adorned with bronze leaf and surrounded by lush ornamentation.

Hyperrealism and Realist Portraits (2010s)

Self-portraits and trompe l’oeil works interrogate personal identity and craft, blending photorealism with conceptual play.

Seascapes (2021–present)

Recent paintings deploy oil and bronze leaf to create stylised ocean scenes, continuing her ‘semi-abstraction’ via rhythmic lines, metallic surfaces, and shifting light. These are central to her solo exhibition at MOCA Los Angeles (2025–2026) and featured in the 2024 Whitney Biennial.

Select Awards and Accolades

Exhibitions

Takako Yamaguchi has been the subject of both solo exhibitions and group exhibitions. Below is a selection of important exhibitions:

Solo Exhibitions

  • MOCA Focus: Takako Yamaguchi, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2025–2026)
  • Takako Yamaguchi: New Paintings, Ortuzar Projects, New York (2023)
  • as-is.la, Los Angeles (2024, 2022)
  • Ramiken Crucible, New York (2021)
  • STARS Gallery, Los Angeles (2021)
  • Cardwell Jimmerson Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2010)
  • Nevada Museum, Reno (2007)
  • Kathryn Markel Fine Arts, New York (2007)
  • Jan Baum Gallery, Los Angeles (2006)

Group Exhibitions

  • Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2024)
  • Ordinary People: Photorealism and the Work of Art since 1968, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2024)
  • Infinite Regress: Mystical Abstraction from the Permanent Collection and Beyond, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City (2024)
  • The Ocean, Bergen Kunsthall, Norway (2021)
  • With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and Hessel Museum, Bard College (2019–2021)
  • Transcendence: Abstraction & Symbolism in the American West, Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Utah (2015)
  • California Echoes: Women Inspired by Nature, Orange County Center for Contemporary Art, California (2007)
  • L.A. Post-Cool, Museum of Art, San Jose, California (2002)

More Reading

The artist’s practice has been featured in leading magazines, including Art Basel Magazineand Cultured. As noted in Art Basel Magazine: ‘For nearly half a century, Takako Yamaguchi has sidestepped the aesthetics favored by the art world, and instead focused on styles that fell out of fashion decades before... What is it that makes the work feel so vital today?’

Takako Yamaguchi FAQs

What is most distinctive about Takako Yamaguchi’s art practice?

Takako Yamaguchi’s paintings stand out for their synthesis of diverse global traditions—from decorative Japanese art to Art Nouveau and Mexican muralism—while employing both abstraction and representation. Her ‘abstractions in reverse’ undo historical expectations, moving from modernist abstraction toward a lyrical, resonant figuration.

Where can visitors see Takako Yamaguchi’s artworks in person?

In 2025–2026, MOCA Focus: Takako Yamaguchi at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles offers her first major solo museum exhibition in the city. Works are also held in permanent collections at Musée d’Art Moderne Paris, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Hammer Museum Los Angeles, Long Beach Museum of Art, and others.

What are Takako Yamaguchi’s best-known series or themes?

Key series include ‘Innocent Bystander’, which merges allegorical figures and Art Nouveau styling, her hyperrealistic self-portraits from the 2010s, and the recent metallic seascapes marrying Japanese and Western references while exploring the boundaries between naturalism and abstraction.

Has Takako Yamaguchi received institutional recognition?

Yes, she has been selected for the 2024 Whitney Biennial, awarded the Anonymous Was A Woman Award (2024), and will present her first solo museum show at MOCA Los Angeles (2025–2026), affirming her stature in contemporary art.

Are there notable facts about Takako Yamaguchi?

Her multidisciplinary approach and resistance to artistic categories positioned her as an under-recognised yet influential figure for decades. Recent years have seen a market surge, record-breaking auction results, and overdue institutional acclaim.

How do you pronounce Takako Yamaguchi?

Takako Yamaguchi is pronounced: ‘tah-KAH-koh yah-mah-GOO-chee’

Ocula | 2025

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I like romantic paintings, but I’m not a romantic. Even if I tried, I don’t think I could do loose, brushy, expressive strokes. I’m much more comfortable being meticulous.
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Explore Takako Yamaguchi's Exhibitions

Representative Artworks

Takako Yamaguchi, Procession (2024). Oil and metal leaf on canvas. 101.6 × 152.4 cm. Courtesy the artist; Ortuzar, New York; and as-is.la, Los Angeles. Photo: Gene Ogami.
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Takako Yamaguchi, Stitch (2023). Oil and metal leaf on canvas. 106.7 × 127 cm. Courtesy the artist; Ortuzar, New York; and as-is.la, Los Angeles. Photo: Gene Ogami.
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Takako Yamaguchi, Wrapper (2023). Oil and metal leaf on canvas. 152.4 × 101.6 cm. Courtesy the artist; Ortuzar, New York; and as-is.la, Los Angeles. Photo: Gene Ogami.
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Takako Yamaguchi, Guide (2024). Oil and metal leaf on canvas. 106.7 × 127 cm. Courtesy the artist; Ortuzar, New York; and as-is.la, Los Angeles. Photo: Gene Ogami.
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Exhibition view: MOCA Focus: Takako Yamaguchi, MOCA Grand Avenue, Los Angeles (29 June 2025–4 January 2026). Courtesy MOCA. Photo: Jeff McLane.
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Takako Yamaguchi in Ocula Magazine

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