KYOTO, Re-creation of Reminiscence    ―― Lacquerware in Modern Japan

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Event

KYOTO, Re-creation of Reminiscence    ―― Lacquerware in Modern Japan
July 19 2014(Sat) – August 24 2014(Sun)

http://www.momak.go.jp/English/exhibitionArchive/2014/404.html

Venue

The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
http://www.momak.go.jp/English/
Access: Okazaki Enshoji-cho, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8344,
Japan
Tel: 075-761-4111
Hours: 9:30 ~ 17:00/Tuesday ~ Thursday・
Weekend, national holiday(entry up to 30 minutes before closing.)
9:30 ~ 20:00/Friday
(entry up to 30 minutes before closing.)
Closed: Monday (Exception: Open on July 21 (Mon./holiday), closed on July 22 (Tue.))

Description

 Since the olden days, lacquer art, in which the tap of lacquer trees is applied as daub or glue, has been used for a wide variety of daily utensils in Japan, including furnishings, stationery, accessories and tableware, and has established rich culture of lacquer, represented by the maki-e technique, unparalleled anywhere in the world. Drastic change in social structure occurred in Japan during the modern period, together with the introduction of a wide variety of aspects of western civilization which have continued to pour into Japan. In this influx of western culture were included the new concepts of “art” and “crafts.” The division of the two concepts greatly affected the environment surrounding lacquer art, as it did other fields of craft as well. While a great deal of influence came from Tokyo, which played a leading role in introducing a new system for art and art education during the Meiji period, the lacquer art world of Kyoto, which had always been intertwined with various traditional and cultural phases ranging from local industry to the refined world of leisure and inherited since the pre-modern period, gave birth to a rich, cultural diversity that cannot be explained within the conventional framework of craft history alone.
  This exhibition features the lacquer art of Kyoto in the modern period which until now has garnered little attention. Although there has been a substantial outflow overseas of many significant Japanese modern craft pieces in recent years, some of the most excellent works of prominent craftsmen such as Tomita Koshichi and Koda Shuetsu are returning home from museums abroad on this occasion. This, the first large-scale exhibition of modern lacquer art in Kyoto, introduces superb works by generally unknown lacquer artists from the late Edo, through Meiji and Taisho, to early Showa periods, and will provide us with a unique opportunity to reconsider the modernization of “crafts” through lacquer art.

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