Within days of his detention, Obata began organizing an art school and signing up other detainees as students. Friends and students from Berkeley donated time and supplies. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, which decades later would acquire Obata’s art, donated material as well. By the end of June, just a few months after his internment, he’d collected 87 student works and organized a show hung at Mills College.
When Obata was transferred to a detention center in Topaz, Utah, he continued to produce and teach art with the same energy. With permission, he lectured at Brigham Young University and the University of Utah. By the time Obata and his family were finally let out of detention, he’d produced over 500 paintings.
One of these paintings was Moonlight over Topaz, Utah, a watercolor on silk commissioned by the Japanese American Citizens League and gifted to Eleanor Roosevelt. While the first lady did not publicly rebuke her husband’s detention of Japanese Americans, she visited the camp at Gila River and urged closing internment camps, stating that Japanese immigrants posed no threat. Obata’s Moonlight Over Topaz, Utah, hung in Eleanor Roosevelt’s bedroom until she died in 1962.
Legacy
In 1943, Obata was released from Topaz, but living in California as a Japanese American wasn’t possible, so he moved to St. Louis, Missouri, and stayed there until the government lifted the exclusion order. In 1945, Obata returned to Berkeley and taught for nine more years before retiring. He continued to lead art tours to Japan and to publish books about his painting techniques.
With time, and through the efforts of Obata’s granddaughter, Kimi Kodani Hill, Obata is remembered for resilience, humanity, and his continual pursuit of beauty. The Whitney, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Smithsonian own his work.
For several years, Yosemite National Park has commemorated Obata with the Obata Art Weekend. This August would be the fifth annual event, though with federal budget cuts, plans remain uncertain. Yosemite spokesman Scott Gediman says, “It will depend on park conditions and staffing levels.”
Throughout all of the turmoil in Obata’s life, nature was the great redeeming constant. His granddaughter Kimi Hill said, “He felt that he could embrace this beauty and the beauty also embraced him—no matter what was going on in the rest of the country, nature was always there for him.”