AH Test 2 - Chapter 26 -Japanese Art after 1333
Shogun
military dictator
samurais
noble warriors
Rinpa school
(renaissance of the previous Heian culture) Kyoto. Painter Tawaraya Sotatsu was an honored member of this school.
Muromachi Period
1392-1573 Shogun deposed emperor with assistance of the Samurais
Edo Period
1615-1868 harshly controlled society prosperous age society divided into samurai, farmers, artisans and merchants (in order) creativity came from artisans and merchants traditions of past were revived
The Tea Ceremony
Chanoyu is the term encompassing ritual drinking of tea custom of drinking powdered tea was brought from China to Japan by Zen Monks.
Tokyo used to be named
Edo
Shoin rooms
Formal room for receiving important guests. typical Japanese room - take shoes off, etc.
Kano Eitoku
Fusuma example Pines, cranes, plum trees. Named Kano school. from Mamoyama period
Thirty-Six views of Mount Fiji
Hokusai painted this The Great Wave is one of those views.
Ukiyo-E School
In urban Edo, after a fire, a witty and irreverent expression appeared in visual and literary arts. Kabuki theatre and woodblock prints of ukiyo-e. Ukiyo-e = polychrome woodblock print. Sharaku = artist WITTY EXPRESSION
Cloth and Ceramics
Japanese exceeded in textiles and ceramics. no distinction between fine arts and crafts training and teamwork under masterful supervision was the approach to artistic production.
Fusuma example
Kano Eitoku
Textiles
Kosode - garment with small sleeve openings.
Literati Painting
Kyoto's distance from Edo allowed for new school of art and philosophy. Ideas from Chinese Daoism promoted each person's uniqueness. Chinese culture and tea were a political protest.
Decorative paintings for the Shoin Rooms
Monoyama art = massive scale of paintings that decorated the walls of castles. interior spaces were divided by paper - covered sliding doors (fusuma) that because canvases for large-scale murals.
Three distinct forms of expression during the Edo Period/Japanese Art
Rinpa School (renaissance of the previous Heian culture) Kyoto. Literati painting : Kyoto Ukiyo-E : Edo (Tokyo)
Tawaraya Sotatsu
Rinpa school painter ~folding screens~ possibly depicts the islands of Matsushima. Waves at Matsushima - two panels, very abstract
most famous tea master in Japan
Sen no Rikyu
Ukiyo-E artist
Sharaku produced lots of prints, mostly of famous Kabuki actors. ~ Hokusai created Thirty-Six views of Mount Fiji- a series of graphic prints The Great Wave is one of those views.
Rinpa school painter
Tawaraya Sotatsu commoner who gained favor of aristocrats one of his famous ~folding screens~ possibly depicts the islands of Matsushima. commissioned for a Buddhist temple by a wealthy merchant. Waves at Matsushima - two panels, very abstract also known for painting and making fans.
The Taian
a tearoom that preserves Sen no Rikyu's design. simple, no decoration tiny space with Japanese writing in the middle. natural materials just a small space with chinese symbol being the only recognizable thing
Hokusai
Ukiyo-E artist created Thirty-Six views of Mount Fiji- a series of graphic prints The Great Wave is one of those views. common people, followers of the "Fiji Cult" bought copies as souvenirs.
Shoin
actual formal room
A Meiji Period Painter
Yokoyama Taikan Floating Lights - inspired by a visit to Calecutta where he observed women engaging in fortune telling on banks of the Ganges river. 3 Japanese/Indian women.
Muromachi period is marked by popularity of
Zen Buddhism
Artist Sesshu trained as a monk but specialized in
art Traveled to China because of his patrons influenced by Song and Yuan masters bolder style as a result some patrons = samurais
Sharaku's painting of Otani Oniji
captures a tension-filled moment from an action drama. plays role of manservant extremely creepy Chinese man ***manservant's were always in charge of doing the violent deeds*** going in to kill someone
new architect form
castle (fortified military complex)
Himeji Castle
example of a surviving castle typical Chinese/Japanese building. Looks like China Town.
Yugure (Twilight)
finest surviving early tea bowls
Kosode
garment with small sleeve openings. few Kosode prior to Edo period survive - remaining show the taste of affluent women of period. looks like a teepee, similar to a Komono.
Rock Garden
in Ryoanji, Kyoto
Momoyama period
late Muromachi Japan turned into being socially unstable Momoyama followed fall of the last Muromachi shogunate Monoyama = "peach hill" Portugese and Spanish influences art of this period was opulent and simple
Zen ink painting
monochrome landscape paintings influence of Chinese and Korea
Sen no Rikyu
most famous tea master in Japan in his view, tea ceremony was ultimate view of hospitality.
The Great Wave
one of the views in Thirty-Six views of Mount Fiji Hokusai the painting I was going to buy at AC Moore Have to read it from right to left.
fusuma
paper covered sliding doors
Ukiyo-E means
pictures from a floating world.
The Tea Bowl
slightly misshapen Korean-style rice bowls became inspiration for potters. finest surviving early tea bowls = Yugure (Twilight) gritty red clay of Raku ware was developed specifically for tea ceremony. red bowl, 3 inches. looks like a sunset, why it's called Twilight.
Chanoyu
the term encompassing ritual drinking of tea
Sesshu's "Winter landscape"
vertical hanging painting boring ... gray and black
The Modern Period
wave of imperialist politics from other countries. Commodore Matthew Perry forced opening of trade ports in Japan, and precipitated the downfall of the Tokugawa Shogunate. Edo was renamed Tokyo. Emperor was restored to power in 1868. Beginning of Meiji (Enlightened Rule) Restoration. Japan adopted Western customs.