Joel Stewart
Joel Stewart
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Yeh...it was tough then. All for the sake of orange wine even.
The lawd writes straight with crooked wines.
walks straight between crooked lines?
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Yeh...it was tough then. All for the sake of orange wine even.
The lawd writes straight with crooked wines.
Actually, like B'dx I think it's governed by the size of the bank account.originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Another myth bites the dust.
Well, when you think of it, it's hard to imagine such a polite and interdependant culture having to wait for the Portuguese to give them a word to help grease the wheels, eh?
On the other hand, the whole world can thank Portugal for helping influence the birth of Ukiyo-e...and, in turn, the Impressionist period. Back when Japan had cut itself off from the rest of the world, the woodblock prints (which Vincent, Monet, et al, collected) hadn't been created yet. Pre-Ukiyo-e prints are much much flatter...rather primitive in appearance, compared to the sophisticated, implied depth one sees in Ukiyo-e.
Japan did trade with one country during the shut out period: Portugal. Portugal had access to the developments of modern perspective happening at the time in Europe. Drawings and (maybe) paintings from Europe made their way into Japanese artists' hands through the only port open to trade, Nagasaki. Local artists incorporated the newly developed perspective lessons and correspondingly, depth within the picture plane developed....leading to the Ukiyo-e prints we recognize as being "so Japanese" today. That the Impressionists were attracted to such prints in the first place has at least as much to do with recognizing something vaguely familiar within that "foreign" style, as it does discovering something so seemingly "new" altogether, in fact. Of course, the anti-salon artists were hungry for different subject matter too...and the beauty of the commonplace, prevalent in those Ukiyo-e, was just the ticket as well.
Phew, I feel better now.
Yeah, I've always (well, since studying Japanese art in college) been fascinated by how that recognition worked. Just foreign enough, on both sides.
Exactly. And may help explain why a few major collectors of Impressionism are Japanese.
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Another myth bites the dust.
Well, when you think of it, it's hard to imagine such a polite and interdependant culture having to wait for the Portuguese to give them a word to help grease the wheels, eh?
On the other hand, the whole world can thank Portugal for helping influence the birth of Ukiyo-e...and, in turn, the Impressionist period. Back when Japan had cut itself off from the rest of the world, the woodblock prints (which Vincent, Monet, et al, collected) hadn't been created yet. Pre-Ukiyo-e prints are much much flatter...rather primitive in appearance, compared to the sophisticated, implied depth one sees in Ukiyo-e.
Japan did trade with one country during the shut out period: Portugal. Portugal had access to the developments of modern perspective happening at the time in Europe. Drawings and (maybe) paintings from Europe made their way into Japanese artists' hands through the only port open to trade, Nagasaki. Local artists incorporated the newly developed perspective lessons and correspondingly, depth within the picture plane developed....leading to the Ukiyo-e prints we recognize as being "so Japanese" today. That the Impressionists were attracted to such prints in the first place has at least as much to do with recognizing something vaguely familiar within that "foreign" style, as it does discovering something so seemingly "new" altogether, in fact. Of course, the anti-salon artists were hungry for different subject matter too...and the beauty of the commonplace, prevalent in those Ukiyo-e, was just the ticket as well.
Phew, I feel better now.
Yeah, I've always (well, since studying Japanese art in college) been fascinated by how that recognition worked. Just foreign enough, on both sides.
Exactly. And may help explain why a few major collectors of Impressionism are Japanese.
Not watching the auctions? How will you know when to step in and bid?originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Another myth bites the dust.
Well, when you think of it, it's hard to imagine such a polite and interdependant culture having to wait for the Portuguese to give them a word to help grease the wheels, eh?
On the other hand, the whole world can thank Portugal for helping influence the birth of Ukiyo-e...and, in turn, the Impressionist period. Back when Japan had cut itself off from the rest of the world, the woodblock prints (which Vincent, Monet, et al, collected) hadn't been created yet. Pre-Ukiyo-e prints are much much flatter...rather primitive in appearance, compared to the sophisticated, implied depth one sees in Ukiyo-e.
Japan did trade with one country during the shut out period: Portugal. Portugal had access to the developments of modern perspective happening at the time in Europe. Drawings and (maybe) paintings from Europe made their way into Japanese artists' hands through the only port open to trade, Nagasaki. Local artists incorporated the newly developed perspective lessons and correspondingly, depth within the picture plane developed....leading to the Ukiyo-e prints we recognize as being "so Japanese" today. That the Impressionists were attracted to such prints in the first place has at least as much to do with recognizing something vaguely familiar within that "foreign" style, as it does discovering something so seemingly "new" altogether, in fact. Of course, the anti-salon artists were hungry for different subject matter too...and the beauty of the commonplace, prevalent in those Ukiyo-e, was just the ticket as well.
Phew, I feel better now.
Yeah, I've always (well, since studying Japanese art in college) been fascinated by how that recognition worked. Just foreign enough, on both sides.
Exactly. And may help explain why a few major collectors of Impressionism are Japanese.
Oh, yes? I didn't know that. And frankly am surprised by it, given the dearth of Impressionist works I saw in Tokyo museums.
But maybe I was at the wrong museums. I guess if you visited the United States and didn't visit the Met, the MoMA, The Art Institute of Chicago, or the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, that you might leave thinking Americans didn't care that much about Impressionism.
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Levi -Private collections, man. Think Dr. Gachet. The museums may have their day(s), but mostly exhibit loan shows (Boston Museum collection is here now and quite strong actually.) Ohara museum in Kurashiki is a private collection, quite solid from deep pockets. Tom may be right....Impressionism is highly bankable....but the underlying connection must also help tip scales, I think.
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Levi - You did see the Pine Forest (Matsurin) by Hasegawa at the Natl Museum in Ueno park, didn't you? I'd trade 3/4 of the Impressionist works for that one piece (well, it's in two pieces...screens, that is.)
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
The museums have some, but for Kyoto, like Rome, a lot of the work still exists in it's originally intended space. You will find masterpieces on sliding screen doors, tucked away in little temples here and there. Works on paper that are several hundred yrs old...and many are stunning. Several works in my neighborhood actually..we're spoiled.
originally posted by JBrennan:
The Dutch also had a trading center in Japan from the 1600s onward.
originally posted by Levi Dalton:
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
The museums have some, but for Kyoto, like Rome, a lot of the work still exists in it's originally intended space. You will find masterpieces on sliding screen doors, tucked away in little temples here and there. Works on paper that are several hundred yrs old...and many are stunning. Several works in my neighborhood actually..we're spoiled.
I was blown away by Kamakura, so I'm sure Kyoto would be just incredible to visit.
originally posted by Joel Stewart:
Levi -Private collections, man. Think Dr. Gachet. The museums may have their day(s), but mostly exhibit loan shows (Boston Museum collection is here now and quite strong actually.)
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
How are wine prices in Japan? Big import taxes?