Featuring over 50 masterpieces of modern Japanese art from the Tokyo National Museum, the exhibition includes six objects designated «Important Cultural Properties of Japan,» including Dancing Lady Maiko Girl by Kuroda Seiki and the iconic Portrait of Reiko by Kishida Ryusei as well as other important works in
Japanese modern art history such as Mount Fuji Rising above Clouds by Yokoyama Taikan and Spring Rain by Shimomura Kanzan.
Not exact matches
Taking influence from classical portraiture, Egyptian hieroglyphs and
Japanese woodblock prints, as well as public signage, information boards, and traffic signs, the artist connects the clean visual language of
modern life, with the fundamentals of
art history.
1971 6th Guggenheim International Exhibition, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA Words and Image, Pinnar Gallery, Tokyo, Japan Chronicle of Post-War
Art, The Museum of
Modern Art Kamakura & Hayama, Japan Tokyo Gallery Exhibition 1971, Tokyo Gallery, Tokyo / Pinnar Gallery, Tokyo / Saikodo Gallery, Tokyo, Japan The 10th Contemporary
Art Exhibition of Japan: Humans and Nature, Tokyo Metropolitan
Art Museum, Japan Kyoto Municipal Museum of
Art, Japan Aichi Cultural Hall, Japan Miyazaki Prefectural Museum of Nature and
History, Japan Sasebo Central Citizens Hall, Nagasaki, Japan Fukuoka Prefectural Culture Hall, Japan Beaupin Exhibition, Pinnar Gallery, Tokyo, Japan The 1st Anniversary Exhibition & 100th Anniversary of Mainichi Shimbun, Today's 100 People, Hyogo Prefectural Museum of
Art, Japan Contemporary
Japanese Prints, Yokohama Civic
Art Gallery, Kanagawa, Japan Contemporary
Japanese Art, Staempfi Gallery, New York, USA The 5th Japan
Art Festival, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA The 7th International Biennial Exhibition of Prints in Tokyo, The National Museum of
Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan The National Museum of
Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan The 5th Japan
Art Festival, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA Contemporary
Japanese Art, Staempfi Gallery, New York, USA The 5th Japan
Art Festival, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA The 7th International Biennial Exhibition of Prints in Tokyo, The National Museum of
Modern Art, Tokyo, Japan The National Museum of
Modern Art, Kyoto, February 20 - March 21 The 5th Japan
Art Festival, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
The first panel, on the
history of long - neglected artists includes Sharon Spain, associate director of the Asian American
Art Project; Mark Johnson, professor of art at San Francisco State University and curator of Asian / American / Modern Art: Shifting Currents, 1900 — 1970 at the de Young Museum; Karin Higa, adjunct senior curator of art at the Japanese American National Museum; and Gordon Chang, professor of history at Stanford Universi
Art Project; Mark Johnson, professor of
art at San Francisco State University and curator of Asian / American / Modern Art: Shifting Currents, 1900 — 1970 at the de Young Museum; Karin Higa, adjunct senior curator of art at the Japanese American National Museum; and Gordon Chang, professor of history at Stanford Universi
art at San Francisco State University and curator of Asian / American /
Modern Art: Shifting Currents, 1900 — 1970 at the de Young Museum; Karin Higa, adjunct senior curator of art at the Japanese American National Museum; and Gordon Chang, professor of history at Stanford Universi
Art: Shifting Currents, 1900 — 1970 at the de Young Museum; Karin Higa, adjunct senior curator of
art at the Japanese American National Museum; and Gordon Chang, professor of history at Stanford Universi
art at the
Japanese American National Museum; and Gordon Chang, professor of
history at Stanford University.
Drawing influence from classical portraiture, Egyptian hieroglyphs and
Japanese woodblock prints, as well as public signage, information boards and traffic signs, the artist connects the clean visual language of
modern life, with the fundamentals of
art history.
Her key works include Mingei Theory and
Japanese Modernisation: Cultural National - ism and Oriental Orientalism, «Transnational
Modern Design
Histories in East Asia» and «Negotiating
Histories: Traditions in
Modern and Contemporary Asia - Paci c
Art.»
The Museum of
Modern Art, Tokyo presents «Things: Rethinking Japanese Photography and Art in 1970s» which includes Lee Ufan's work alongside other pivotal characters in Japanese art histo
Art, Tokyo presents «Things: Rethinking
Japanese Photography and
Art in 1970s» which includes Lee Ufan's work alongside other pivotal characters in Japanese art histo
Art in 1970s» which includes Lee Ufan's work alongside other pivotal characters in
Japanese art histo
art history.
In keeping with The Met Breuer's mission to present
modern art in the context of the
history of
art, this exhibition will include select works from The Met collection by other artists who shaped Hartley's vision, including French modernist Paul Cézanne,
Japanese printmakers Utagawa Hiroshige and Katsushika Hokusai, and American painters Winslow Homer and Albert Pinkham Ryder.