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Mythology was implicit in most of Hodaka’s work up to this point. In the Mythology and Landscape Prints 1966-74 it becomes explicit, both in titles and in the idea that modern culture is driven by its own myths. To express this Hodaka created his version of Pop art, which is quite different from what he had seen in 1963 in New York. He sought to unmask the energy, the drumbeat of the modern myth and its impact on society and nature.
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264. Holiday Mythology 1966
Photo lithograph, Woodblock
40.5 x 51.5 cm
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272. Calendar - Red 1966
Photo lithograph, Woodblock
46.0 x 34.0 cm
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279. Face and Mask 1968
Woodblock, Embossing
48.5 x 63.5 cm
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285. Pachamama 1968
Copper etching, Woodblock
29.5 x 36.0 cm
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288. Festival 1968
Woodblock
28.0 x 20.0 cm
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293. Nonsense Mythology
1969 Photo silkscreen
60.3 x 45.4 cm
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294. Nonsense Mythology (Purple) 1969
Photo silkscreen
60.0 x 45.0 cm
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298. Mythology in the Sky
1969 Photo silkscreen
57.2 x 44.9 cm
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299. Myth in the Sky 1970
Photo zinc relief, Woodblock
30.0 x 24.0 cm
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300. Profiles 1970
Photo zinc relief, Woodblock
37.5 x 64.5 cm
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302. Mythological Patterns (Orange)
1970 Photo silkscreen
32.0 x 47.0 cm
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