ArtistsTatsuo Ikeda
Tatsuo Ikeda

Tatsuo Ikeda

Artist
Painting
Representation
None documented
1
Institutional Exhibitions
0
Works in Collection
9
Assets Indexed
0
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
80%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Movements
No movements recorded
Related Artists
No edges recorded
Influence Graph
No influence edges encoded yet.

Selected Institutional Exhibitions

View all exhibitions →
No image
New Humans: Memories of the Future
New Museum
2026
About

Why this artist matters now

Tatsuo Ikeda was a Japanese avant-garde artist. An active figure in the Japanese postwar art scene, Ikeda’s works adopted a surrealist sensibility deeply grounded in social and political critique. Using strategies of distortion, grotesque figures, biomorphic forms, and a satirical tone, Ikeda sharply engaged with a range of contemporary issues including labor politics and class conflict, Japan-United States relations, nuclear disarmament, and legacies of militarism, especially through the proliferation and continued presence of American military bases on Japanese soil after the end of the Occupation era. A leading figure in the Reportage movement of the 1950s and early 60s, Ikeda, along with artists such as Hiroshi Nakamura, Kikuji Yamashita, and Shigeo Ishii, visited sites of protest across the country to document the realities of postwar social unrest through a expressive mode inflected with both surrealist and realist tenors.

Source: Artsy · Trust score: 85% · Updated 1mo ago

Graph relationships

Taste overlap and adjacency

Movement
Medium
Painting
Related Artists
6 in graph
Institutional

Museum Collections

Record

Images

Artsy artist portrait
Artsy
Gentle Crane, plate 1 from The World of Toys" Series No. 3 (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
Gentle Crane, plate 1 from The World of Toys" Series No. 3 (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
Record

Movements and affiliations

No movements linked yet
Institutional

Representation & Collections

In collection
Art Institute of Chicago
In collection
New Museum
In collection
New Museum
Record

Exhibitions and timeline