Catalogues

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contact the gallery to place an order,
telephone: 206-467-9077
email:
kagedo@kagedo.com
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Light Through Clouds, Modern
Japanese Painting
Introduction
Despite the clouds of
war, political upheaval and social change, the first four and a half
decades of the 20th century saw an unprecedented flowering of
Japanese painting. The opening of Japan to the West during the
preceding years brought many Japanese artists to study in Europe and
North America. In addition the founding of the Tokyo School of Fine
Arts provided a forum for the study of both Western and Japanese
Art. Before this period students followed in the path of the
teachers under whom they apprenticed. By the turn of the 20th
century young artists were exposed to stylistic and technical
inspiration from a broad range of painting schools and traditions.
These painters began to define a new type of Japanese painting,
using traditional techniques to express a modern view of the world.
They defined their art in opposition to Yoga or Western
Style Painting. Currents of cross-cultural influence of course
eddied back and forth between Japan and the West, inevitably
inspiring further innovation in both traditions. At the same time
the number of public art exhibitions in Japan grew at an
extraordinary pace, encouraging competition and individual
creativity as never before seen in the Japanese art world.
The age saw an immense level of
patronage for the arts. The Imperial Government actively sponsored
exhibitions, purchasing pieces for the Imperial Collections and to
be given as gifts. While the upper classes traditionally valued the
arts, the rising middle class was also eager to acquire art to
display in their homes. Attendance at the government sponsored
exhibitions ran into the hundreds of thousands. The press followed
the careers of individual artists in the newspapers and an
accomplished artist could in the space of a few years make his or
her fortune. So the rewards of money and prestige attracted vast
talent into the private and public art schools.
Artists strove to bring their
best work to exhibition. The government sponsored exhibitions gave
participants the chance to gain the prestige of Imperial patronage
and recognition on a national level. With non-exhibition paintings
the level of quality and complexity often varied depending on the
status of the patron and what they were willing to spend. Even
extremely important and successful artists such as Yamamoto Shunkyo
worked on different levels. Masterpieces such as his hawk and snow
on pine screens (illustrated as number 21 in this catalogue)
represent extremely high level commission work.
The world that supported this
renaissance came to a sudden end with World War II, and the
political associations and hostile emotions associated with the War
shadowed the period afterwards. Few Western institutions or
collectors paid any attention to the era. The arts of early 20th
century Japan continued to be quietly collected by Japanese
national, prefectural and municipal art museums, and by private
museums and collectors.
Nihonga or Japanese style
paintings from the period meld traditional technique with a
modernity of style that still remains essentially Japanese. Pigments
were ground from minerals such as malachite or azurite for green or
blue. Powdered clam shell produced white. Some vegetable sources
such as indigo were available. Gold and silver leaf as well as
powders brightened the palette. These pigments retain a clarity and
brilliance that is extremely stable. The fineness with which the
pigments were ground and the mixture of other elements allowed for
gradation of color. The colors required an animal glue binding agent
or
nikawa. Japanese paper or silk formed the support for paintings,
and these were mounted either as hanging scrolls, or on lattice
style wood frames for panels, sometimes linked by paper hinges to
form folding screens. The technical background required to mount
paintings properly was complex and specialized, and it remains so
today.
Many of the paintings created for
exhibition were large in scale, and over time the formats preferred
by artists tended to shift. Byōbu or folding screens became
less and less common in the exhibitions after 1920, and this is true
for both pairs of six panel screens or for smaller two panel sets.
One sees instead increasing numbers of impressive panels with
lacquer frames, or large hanging scrolls. These exhibition paintings
are now largely held by public institutions in Japan, though of
course many were destroyed in the fire bombings of Tokyo, Osaka and
other major Japanese cities during the War.
One of the principal groups of
these exhibition paintings in private hands belonged to the Meguro
Gajoen Museum in Tokyo. Collected from the 1920s into the early
1940s by Hosokawa Rikizō, and stored at his hotel and wedding hall
complex at the Gajoen during the War, these paintings only came onto
the market in 2003 with the bankruptcy of the Gajoen’s holding
company. Despite losses and damage to the collection in the fire
bombing of Tokyo, thousands of paintings remained. Of these many
were in such poor condition that they cannot be salvaged and retain
only historical interest. Some were poorly restored in the early
1990s. A handful found their way to other museums in Japan.
Kagedo was fortunate to be the
first and only art dealer from the West to purchase directly from
the Gajoen in 2003. We returned again and again, spending weeks
reviewing the surviving paintings in the Gajoen. In the end we were
able to acquire many exhibition masterpieces from the museum
collection. We have also been collecting other fine paintings from
the period and include them here.
In this catalogue we bring you a
visual miscellany of paintings. Images are grouped to reflect
affinities or point up contrasts. The first part consists of
photographs of the art, linked to the text in the back by catalogue
number and artist’s name. The second part covers the text with
biographical background on artists and information on the paintings.
Reduced photographs of the paintings float with the text as a visual
guide. Following this we include a section with reproductions of the
signatures and seals.
Included are examples of the
brilliant naturalism of the bird and flower painters, landscapes,
and the modern portraits created by the painters of
bijinga or beautiful women. In contrast to the idealized images
long painted in the ukiyō-e
or woodblock tradition, these paintings of young women (and very rarely
men) reveal the faces of particular individuals. A new quality of
introspection echoes from their eyes. Their chic mixture of
traditional Japanese and Western qualities fuses a cultural image
that is brightly optimistic, and speaks eloquently of the era.
We hope these paintings open a
window for you on an age of luminous achievement in the arts. Too
often darkened in memory by the tragedies of its later years, the
period in Japan was one brightened by creativity and the embrace of
modernity. As the crucible out of which flowed all contemporary
Japanese Art, the first part of the 20th century deserves an
enlightened reappraisal.
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