Subject: Scrolls, Japanese--Exhibitions

Twelve centuries of Japanese art from the Imperial collections
AuthorFreer Gallery of ArtArthur M. Sackler Gallery (Smithsonian Institution)Yonemura, Ann, 1947-Hirabayashi Moritoku 平林盛得, 1933-Japan. Kunaichō 宮內庁 [宮內廳 Imperial Household Agency]
PlaceWashington, D.C.
PublisherFreer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution
CollectionRicci Institute Library [Luce]
Edition
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook (Exhibition catalog)
Series
ShelfSeminar Room 102-103
Call NumberND1457.J32 W377 1997 LUCE
Description224 pages : color illustrations, color map ; 34 cm
Note

Twelve centuries of Japanese art from the Imperial collections / introduction by Ann Yonemura ; contributions by Hirabayashi Moritoku [and others].

Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Arthur M Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., Dec. 14, 1997-Mar. 8, 1998.

Accompanied by book titled Essays : twelve centuries of Japanese art from the Imperial collections / Hirabayashi Moritoku [and others]. (83 p.; 28 cm.). Published jointly by Imperial Household Agency, Agency for Cultural Affairs, Japan Foundation and the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 222-224) and index.

Showcasing a stunning selection of seventy-six paintings and works of calligraphy dating from the ninth through the twentieth century, many for the first time to a Western audience, this volume celebrates the consistent influence of imperial taste on the development of Japanese art. Rare examples of calligraphy from the Heian and Kamakura (1185-1333) periods attest to a longstanding imperial interest in the aesthetically effective union of word and image. A series of large-scale scrolls by the eighteenth-century painter Ito Jakuchu, presented to the imperial household by the Zen Buddhist temple Shokokuji, represent the most revered Japanese paintings of natural life and the close relationship between the imperial family and the country's religious institutions.

The book also examines the court's role as an art benefactor in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when international influences had a dramatic impact on Japanese notions of the visual arts. Replete with color reproductions, Twelve Centuries of Japanese Art from the Imperial Collections offers scholars, collectors, connoisseurs, historians, and all those interested in Japanese art an unprecedented view of Japanese aesthetic sensibility as expressed in the imperial collections.

Map of Japan -- Chronology -- Emperors and reigning Empresses -- Imperial gift: an artistic legacy / Ann Yonemura.

Multimedia
ISBN1560988932 ; 9781560988939
LCCN97041676