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Salon culture in Japan Akiko Yano

Salon culture in Japan By Akiko Yano

Salon culture in Japan by Akiko Yano


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Salon culture in Japan Summary

Salon culture in Japan: making art, 1750-1900 by Akiko Yano

The first publication to celebrate the British Museums rich collection of these technically sophisticated artworks created as part of Japanese cultural salons in the late 18th and 19th centuries, featuring lively figures in daily life and festivals, elegant birds and flowers, ferocious animals and lyrical landscapes.

In early modern Japan, cultural salons were creative spaces for people of all ages and social levels to pursue painting, poetry and other artistic endeavours, as serious but amateur practitioners. They all used a pen- or art-name. Individuals were therefore able to socialise and interact broadly through these artistic activities, regardless of official social status as regulated by the shogunal government. The idea of communal and collaborative creativity seems to have been especially ingrained around the area of Kyoto and Osaka. Each of the two cities had a distinct character: Kyoto was the national capital, where the emperor and aristocrats resided, and Osaka was the centre of commerce.

Only a fraction of these technically sophisticated artworks has previously been published in colour. With five essays by leading experts that explore this fascinating cultural phenomenon from different angles, and eight shorter insights that delve into specific historical aspects and the personal connections and legacies of cultural figures, this book offers a new perspective on Japanese art and society in the late 18th and 19th centuries.

About Akiko Yano

Principal contributors from the British Museum
Rosina Buckland, Curator, Japanese Collections
Timothy T. Clark, Honorary Research Fellow
Alfred Haft, JTI Project Curator for Japanese Collections
Akiko Yano, Mitsubishi Corporation Curator, Japanese Collections
with C. Andrew Gerstle, Professor Emeritus, SOAS University of London

Supporting contributors
Akama Ryo, Ritsumeikan University
Akeo Keizo, Osaka University of Commerce
Paul Berry, Kyoto University of Foreign Languages
Hirai Yoshinobu, National Museum
of Modern Art, Kyoto
Scott Johnson, Kansai University
Nakatani Nobuo, Kansai University
Ellis Tinios, Leeds University

Table of Contents

Forewords
Introduction
Age of cultural salons (Akiko Yano)
Escaping social status through virtual art names (Andrew Gerstle)
1. Cities
Tale of three cities: Osaka, Kyoto and Edo (Andrew Gerstle)
Osaka, the kitchen of the nation (Keizo Akeo)
Legacies of cultural salons today (Ryo Akama)
2. Everyday life
Painting everyday life (Timothy Clark)
Why were painting manual publications so popular? (Ellis Tinios)
3. Nature
Capturing nature (Alfred Haft)
The scientific and conceptual gaze in Kyoto (Yoshinobu Hirai)
4. China
China in Japan (Rosina Buckland)
Kimura Kenkado: Osakas intellectual giant and his network (Nobuo Nakatani)
A painting of 19th-century literatis friendship (Paul Berry)
5. Poetry
Poetry and painting (Akiko Yano)
Exquisite printed things (surimono) in Kyoto and Osaka, a brief history (Schott Johnson)
Notes and bibliography, glossary
Acknowledgements, picture credits, index

Additional information

GOR013928866
9780714124964
0714124966
Salon culture in Japan: making art, 1750-1900 by Akiko Yano
Used - Like New
Hardback
British Museum Press
2024-06-20
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

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