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Biography

Bumpei Usui was a Japanese-born American painter known for his social realist cityscapes and scenes of urban life as well as his interiors, flower studies, and still lifes. A critic described his style as "cultivated realism" in 1935. Other critics praised his handling of color, feeling for textures, and instinct for space values. Some saw Precisionism in his cityscapes. His paintings of people interacting with each other showed both the humorous and harsher sides of city life. Following his death his work received little attention until, in 2014, the Metropolitan Museum of Art bought one of his paintings and subsequently gave it a prominent place in a major exhibition. Along with his career as painter, Usui was a custom frame maker, furniture designer, and lacquering craftsman. He was also a collector of antique Japanese swords and breeder of Siamese cats.

 

Born in 1898 Usui was raised in Nagano Prefecture, Japan, where his father owned a silkworm farm. When he was nineteen he took ship for London where his brother was a dealer and collector of Western art. There, he learned English and, as time permitted, he made his first paintings. To survive, he obtained a job decorating furniture. As part of this work he learned a style of East Asian decorating that was popular in early 18th-century England. Called Queen Anne lacquering, the technique used gold particles in wet lacquer to decorate chests, cabinets, mirrors, and other furniture. Usui traveled from London to New York in 1921 and again was able to earn his living by applying lacquer decoration in a furniture factory.

 

While earning his living decorating pianos and furniture, Usui began to associate with Japanese artists in the city and to make paintings of his own. The informal group to which he attached himself included Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Kyohei Inukai, Eitaro Ishigaki, Gozo Kawamura, Toshi Shimizu, Kiyoshi Shimizu, Chuzo Tamotzu, and Torajiro Watanabe. In 1921 this group formed an organization devoted to mutual support and the exhibition of their work. In November 1922 it held its first show. Called "Exhibition of the Japan Artists Association in New York City", it was held in the gallery of the Civic Club on 12th Street near Fifth Avenue. The Japanese artists' show was one of the club's first exhibitions. A review in the New York Times noted the youth of the artists and their decision to adopt Western styles in their work. A critic called Usui "self-taught and sensitive", and praised his handling of color. Usui continued to work as a lacquerer in a furniture factory until 1927. He had by then also established an art studio called Dai Butsu or "Great Buddha" at his apartment on West 14th Street. In 1925 he began showing with the Society of Independent Artists, which had no selection juries and offered no prizes. That year he also began showing with Salons of America, another organization that sponsored juryless exhibitions.Like his friend Kuniyoshi he spent part of the summer in the Woodstock artists colony and joined the Woodstock Artists Association. When he showed in a Salons of America exhibition early in 1925, a review in the New Yorker magazine called attention to a painting called "Machine Shop" that, the reviewer said, "is new in a way that does not remind you of every other modern you have seen this year."The exhibition catalog for a Society of Independent Artists later that year included a reproduction of his painting named "Roof at Evening". A review by Forbes Watson in The Arts magazine called the a show of the Independent in 1926, "refreshing and enjoyable" and credited Usui with giving "a humorous outlook on the American scene." A review in Arts and Decoration said that Usui's "Summer Evening" was "truly amusing". Commenting on a painting that would become one of his best known, the reviewer said Usui's "Party on the Roof" was less derivative than other works and noted a detail in which two persons, whom the reviewer called "peeping spinsters", look on, horrified at the bohemian excesses they observe. At an Independents exhibition held in 1929, Usui showed a painting of four women picnicking called "Sunday Afternoon". Writing in the Baltimore Sun, Jerome Klein called it a "clever rendering". During the second half of the 1920s Usui continued to show at the Salons and Independents (as they were called) and in 1927 participated in another group exhibition with Japanese artists. Reporting on a show by the Independents in 1930, a critic credited Usui with a high level of sophistication, skill, and ability. The critic said a painting called "Siesta" was "an exceedingly smart performance."[21] In addition to shows hosted by the Salons and Independents, Usui participated with several new groups during the early 1930s. With six other artists, he helped found an artists' cooperative called "An American Group" in 1931. The seven held their first show at a hotel in February of the next year. Although he had not been a student at the Art Students League, he showed in a print exhibition with a group of the League's former students later that year. During the summer of 1932 he showed for the first time in an exhibition sponsored by Robert U. Godsoe called the Gotham Outdoor Gallery. A reviewer noted that Usui's contributions were a good deal more professional than the ones shown by other artists. The following year he showed at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo. In April 1934 he was given a solo exhibition at the Roerich Museum beside four other artists, all of whom had participated in outdoor exhibitions held in Washington Square. Later that year he participated in a group show at the Contemporary Arts Gallery and in another group show at Wanamaker's department store. The New York Times reproduced a painting from this show and its critic, Edward Alden Jewell, said the painting, called variously "Interior" or simply "Painting" was "enchanting" and "might well have been honored by the purchasing committee, and that certainly should enter some collection without delay." When a collector did thereafter buy the work, the transaction was Usui's first sale. After the show closed, a critic noted that the painting had received much attention.

 

During the early 1930s, Usui's paintings appeared in traveling exhibitions sponsored by the College Art Association. Of one such exhibition at Williams College in 1935, a local critic identified him as "the Greenwich Village picture framer and Siamese cat breeder, who has found time to teach himself art with such amazing results that art patrons and critics in New York are at present convincing themselves that in this Japanese artist, they have made an important find." That year Usui participated in a group exhibition at A. C. A. Galleries. At the time reviewers gave favorable attention to his work. One noted that he had established himself as a well-known artist. As if to confirm his prominence in the art world, the New Yorker magazine included an article about him in its issue for January 5, 1935. Later that year he joined the Federal Art Project as a means of surviving the loss of income brought on by the Great Depression. Over the next seven years group shows held by the project included his work, often receiving critical notice. A painting called "Coal Barges" was reproduced in the catalog of an FAP exhibition in the Museum of Modern Art and three years later the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts awarded it a prize at its 131st annual exhibition. Writing about a Federal Arts Project show in 1938, a critic called a attention to paintings of flowers of his that were exceptional for their "vibrant colors and for the vitality with which old topics are newly endowed". In reviewing this show, another critic said Usui extracted a high level of decorative quality in one of his paintings, adding, "In linear harmony, delicacy of color, and rich quality, it is outstanding." Writing on December 4, 1941, just before the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, another critic praised a flower painting in an FAP exhibition as "very beautiful". After the outbreak of World War II, Usui stopped participating in exhibitions. Before the war, immigration laws prevented him from obtaining US citizenship or marrying a US citizen. After it had begun, his status was changed from "resident alien" to "enemy alien". He was then subject to government surveillance, was prevented from traveling without a permit, and was forbidden to possess any items that might be used to compromise defense. Reviewing a show that had been planned before the declaration of war and opened soon after, a critic drew attention away from his Japanese birth by saying he was "of oriental origin".

In 1947 Usui's work appeared again in New York, this time in a solo exhibition at the Laurel Gallery. The show drew a favorable review from Howard Devree of the New York Times who said his paintings, most of them not previously exhibited, were among his best. A review in Art Digest said they showed sensitive brushwork and a "nice feeling for color". Usui continued to earn his living as a framer and cat breeder but did not show his paintings again until 1978 when he participated in a group show with other Japanese artists at the Azuma gallery. Art in America magazine reproduced an informal portrait by Usui of his friend Kuniyoshi in its issue for January–February of that year. A year later the Salander Galleries gave Usui a retrospective exhibition containing works from 1925 to 1949. He was given a second solo retrospective in 1983, this time in Tokyo in an exhibition at the Fuji Television Gallery.

 

A few decades after his death, a critic for the New York Times said Usui had "fallen out of sight" after enjoying recognition in the 1920s and 1930s that was comparable to the recognition given to such artists as Marsden Hartley and Charles Demuth. In 2014 the Metropolitan Museum of Art gave a detailed description of Usui's 1925 painting called "The Furniture Factory" in an announcement of its recent acquisitions. The museum had obtained the work by trading other pieces in its collection to the commercial gallery that possessed it. Once having bought it, put the painting on view in its Contemporary Art Galleries and, the following year, included it in a special exhibition of 250 works called "Reimagining Modernism: 1900-1950". Reviewing this show, Roberta Smith called "The Furniture Factory" a work of "energetic complexity". Another Times critic noted that it was the only museum holding of a painting by Usui in New York. In 2021 the Smithsonian American Art Museum included a painting called "Portrait of Yasuo Kuniyoshi" (1930) in its "Artist to Artist" exhibition.

 

Usui showed a flower painting in the first-known public exhibition of his work in 1922 and he continued to produce floral pieces and still lifes during the rest of his career.

In addition to floral subjects, still lifes, and cityscapes, Usui painted realistic scenes of everyday city life. Two critics, writing in 1929, associated these paintings with a style called American Scene Painting. More recently, critics noted a connection between these urban paintings and paintings in the Ashcan style that flourished during the 1920s and 1930s. Usui's urban paintings were seen at the time to distinguish themselves from other urban realist works at least partly because of their humor. Critics in the mid-1920s credited him with, as one said, a "humorous outlook on the American scene". In variations on this thought, other critics found his work to be "clever" and "exceedingly smart". In general, critics used terms like "cultivated realism", "linear harmony", "delicacy of color", and "gracious handling" to describe his paintings. Writing in 1935 a critic discussed the skill with which Usui achieved a "peaceful feeling" in one of his landscapes and called him an "able colorist" who had "a charming feeling for textures". In 2014 a curator for the Metropolitan Museum praised Usui's "experimentation with perspective and proportions". 

 

During his career some critics noted the influence of Japanese art in Usui's work while others saw no such influence. One of the first serious considerations of his work, published in 1922, treated it as thoroughly American. Quoting a study by the head of the Tokyo School of Fine Arts, Okakura Kakuzō, the article said Usui and other Japanese artists in New York adopted Western traditions of art in reaction to "the universal condemnation of Eastern customs" then common in the United States. In 1935 a critic said there was nothing Japanese about Usui's paintings, that he and his friends had adopted Western practices, abandoning the technique of their heritage and cultivating an un-Japanese realism. Other critics saw in this work "Japanese versions of the American scene" (1929), called him "a painter who understands the precious quality of the expressive line of his ancestors" (1935), and said his paintings revealed, "something of the tradition of his Japanese ancestors, both in his instinct for space values and in the subtlety of his treatment" (1938). In 1947 a critic struck something of a balance. His flower studies and landscapes, this critic wrote, were quite American yet possessed "delicate touches that remind one that Usui is a Japanese" [sic].

 

Usui began making frames in 1929 at the request of his friend Kuniyoshi. Having begun by making frames for fellow artists, he soon became known for the quality of his work and obtained clients from designers and decorators, such as Donald Deskey, and collectors, such as Abby Aldrich Rockefeller. In 1935, an article on Usui in the New Yorker said his was the "busiest picture frame shop in New York City right now". Writing in 1947, a New York Times critic, Howard Devree, said his would have painted more if he had not been so busy making frames. Late in life his reputation extended beyond New York to the extent that one source wrote that he had become known as one of the best framers in the country.

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