|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Exhibitions: A Bird's-Eye View
Few nations have made art so much a part of life as Japan. Everything from tea drinking to wrestling and archery has been given its place in the esthetic hierarchy. And at the summit are those art masterpieces deemed worthy of the title "national treasures." In fact, they are almost never allowed out of the country.
All of which makes the current exhibition of Japanese artworks, the most important to be sent overseas since World War II, an historic occasion. Organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the $4,000,000 display of treasures is currently at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, winds up in April in Toronto's Royal Ontario Museum. Among the 155 objects, including textiles, armor and ceramics, are some 22 mountain peaks of art, esthetically rare and historically telling, which have culminated trends or determined the artistic course in Japan for 4,500 years. Among the greatest (see color pages) never before seen in the U.S.:
¶ The portrait of the traveling monk Zemmui, a member of the Tendai Buddhist sect, which ranks as a Japanese Giotto. It is a masterpiece of the 11th century, when the Fujiwara shoguns reigned, encouraging the arts as the Medicis did in Italy. The unknown artist profiles the Indian-born patriarch, a posture seldom used before, and gives him a Japanese face. As a light touch, the great priest's shoes appear below his chair, casually kicked off rather than neatly lined up to conform to Japanese etiquette. The picture is incredibly shallow spatially; the chair legs appear to be on a single plane, the monk's robe swirls from his back to his sleeves as if it were turning inside out. But this would not bother the Japanese; they used "bird's-eye" perspectivethe farther up the picture plane the farther back in pictorial space the object.
¶ Sōtatsu's Waterfowls in Lotus Pond is also a kakemono, or hanging scroll, mounted on silk, that shows the development of Japanese art into the early 17th century. Its impressionistic look stems from the artist's technique, known as tarashikomi, the brushing on of successive tones of ink while the underlying ones are wet. Appropriately for "bird's-eye" perspective, the bird below may be smaller than the lotus blossoms above, but the viewer reads it as floating in the foreground.
¶ During the 9th century, statues of healing Buddhas became popular. The 5-ft.-tall Yakushi Nyorai (see opposite page, center) is the most important survivor of the Gangō-ji temple near Nara, once Japan's foremost city. Yet, for all the sanctity surrounding it, this Japanese statue is a bold departure from traditional Chinese elegance. In this Buddha's broad shoulders, strength replaces softness. Carved from a single block of cypress, the sculpture seems to derive its rippling drapery from the wood's grain.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Facebook's Secret Code
- Tiger Gets Mulligan from the TV Networks
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Why Greece Could Be the Next Dubai
- Why Does Google Search Love Examiner.com?
- TIME's Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs of 2009
- The H1N1 Pandemic: Is a Second Wave Possible?
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- Facebook's Secret Code
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- The Job Market: Is a College Degree Worth Less?
- Why Greece Could Be the Next Dubai
- Has 'Climategate' Been Overblown?
- Rick Warren Denounces Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill
- Remarks of President Barack Obama: Acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize
- Will Fashion's Biggest Names Kiss the Runway Goodbye?
- In the Holy Land, Resetting U.S. Mideast Policy





RSS