The World's Largest Modern & Contemporary Prints & Editions Platform

Toko
Shinoda

Tōkō Shinoda is a Japanese Modern artist, is known for her innovative sumi ink paintings and prints that blend traditional calligraphy with Abstract Expressionism. If you're looking for original Tōkō Shinoda prints and editions for sale or would like to sell, request a complimentary valuation and browse our network's most in-demand works.

Toko Shinoda art for sale

Discover Toko Shinoda prints for sale, exclusively available through our private network of collectors. Explore signed and unsigned screenprints, lithographs, digital prints, and rare editioned proof prints by era-defining blue chip artists.

x

Sell Your Art
with Us

Join Our Network of Collectors. Buy, Sell and Track Demand

Submission takes less than 2 minutes & there's zero obligation to sell
The Only Dedicated Print Market IndexTracking 48,500 Auction HistoriesSpecialist Valuations at the Click of a Button Build Your PortfolioMonitor Demand & Supply in Network Sell For Free to our 25,000 Members

Biography

Tōkō Shinoda, born on 28 March 1913 in Dalian, Manchuria, was a celebrated artist whose work spanned the realms of painting and printmaking. Her journey into the art world began at an early age, influenced by her father's passion for sumi-e (ink painting) and calligraphy. After moving to Japan in 1915, she immersed herself in Japanese artistic traditions, developing a style that marries traditional techniques with the boldness of Modern abstraction.

Over her extensive career, Shinoda's works have been exhibited globally, including the Hague National Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Characterised by an exploration of form, line, and space, her art often invokes the ephemeral.

Shinoda's artistic philosophy emphasises the interplay between the physical and the spiritual, reflecting her engagement with both material and metaphysical aspects of art.

Shinoda's career took off in the 1930s when she held her first solo exhibition in Japan, showcasing her approach to sumi ink painting.

By the 1950s, she had begun to gain international recognition, particularly after her works were displayed in the United States. A significant development in her career occurred during her visits to New York, where she engaged with the Abstract Expressionist movement, further influencing her stylistic development.

Shinoda's printmaking reflects her career-long engagement with tradition and Modernity, a hallmark of her broader artistic practice. Her 1980 lithograph Ancient Echo exemplifies this synthesis through its striking balance of bold abstract forms and gestural brushstrokes, reminiscent of Japanese calligraphy. Shinoda's approach to printmaking, much like her paintings, emphasises harmony and contrast, creating works that are at once rooted in cultural heritage and evocative of the energy and movement of Modernity.

At the remarkable age of 107, Shinoda died on 1 March 2021.