- Sadao Hasegawa
was a prominent Japanese graphic artist specializing in male erotica. His work is notable for superb technical skills, elaborate fantastic settings (occasionally reminiscent of
William Blake ), and for incorporating Japanese, Indian, South-East Asian and African mythology. While focusing on depictions of muscular male physique, Hasegawa often turns to extreme sexual situations, bondage and SM themes, which, in the context of his stylized fantasy world, attain a nearly sacral intensity.Hasegawa was born in the north of
Japan , and ended his life by committing suicide on November 20, 1999 inBangkok ,Thailand .uicide details
A few days before his death, Hasegawa had lunch with friend and American artist,
John C. Goss . Jovial and witty as usual, he showed Goss photos of his latest paintings - a series depicting nude, Hindu-inspired male deities. These works would come to be exhibited at a memorial exhibition, along with a final series of starkly disembodied and erect phalluses unlike anything else Hasegawa ever created. Hasegawa's brother had cleaned out the artist's apartment and thrown out all of his works, unaware of their value, but rescued them after receiving a letter posted from Bangkok by Hasegawa asking that his works be sold at the Naruyama Gallery following his death. According to Toshie Urabe, who spoke with Hasegawa's brother, the only clues left at the scene of his death were a small piece of rope (he had asphixiated himself using rope tied around a door knob) and a small stone on which he had painted a portrait ofYukio Mishima (Hasegawa's death proceeded the anniversary of Mishima's own suicide).Publications
*"Sadao Hasegawa: Paintings and drawings" (1990)
*"Paradise Visions" (1996)ee also
*
Homosexuality in Japan
*Shunga (classical Japanese erotic painting)
*Tamotsu Yatō (a Japanese photographer acknowledged as an influence by Hasegawa)
*William Blake
*Chalermchai Kositpipat References
*Tagame, Gengoroh. "Gay Erotic Art in Japan vol. 2: Transitions of Gay Fantasy in the Times", POT Publishing Co. (2006).
External links
* [http://www.jeunesasianart.com/html/gallery_04.html A biography]
* [http://www.tomoffinlandfoundation.org/FOUNDATION/Dispatch/DispSu2000/Hasagawa.htm IMPRESSIONS OF SADAO HASEGAWA by Steve Adonna]
* [http://www.utopia-asia.com/gal/jmasters.htm an online exhibition of some of Hasegawa's works]
* [http://andrejkoymasky.com/liv/fam/bioh2/hase1.html Brief bio]
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