Artist signatures page loaded. Found 10 signature examples for Mine Okubo. Sign in or subscribe to view signatures.
Mine Okubo SIGNATURES
1912 Riverside, California - 2001 Manhattan, New York. Known for: Painting-mod townscape-genre, abstraction.
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans living in Western states who were evacuated from their homes early in 1942. They were interned by the federal government as a precautionary measure, a move that has been much criticized. Two- thirds of the internees were, like... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans living in Western states who were evacuated from their homes early in 1942. They were interned by the federal government as a precautionary measure, a move that has been much criticized. Two- thirds of the internees were, like her, American citizens. She was born to Japanese immigrant parents in Riverside, Californ... Read full biography
Sign in required to view signatures
Mine Okubo - Artist Signatures
Mine Okubo Artist Signatures
Access Required
askART does not represent or warrant that the information accessible via this Site is accurate, complete or current, including, but not limited to, such information contained in artist biographies, auction records, samples of artists' signatures, artworks for sale, and information and value estimates contained in artist price valuation reports.