The world of Ito Jakuchu : classical Japanese painter of all things great and small in nature / Sato Yasuhiro ; translated by Michael Brase
2020
ND1059.I79 S28 2020 (Mapit)
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Details
Title
The world of Ito Jakuchu : classical Japanese painter of all things great and small in nature / Sato Yasuhiro ; translated by Michael Brase
Author
Uniform Title
Motto shiritai Itō Jakuchū. English
Edition
First English edition
ISBN
9784866581354 (hardcover)
4866581352 (hardcover)
4866581352 (hardcover)
Published
Tokyo : Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture (JPIC), 2020
Copyright
©2020
Language
English
Language Note
Translated from the Japanese
Description
167 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), color maps, plans ; 29 cm
Call Number
ND1059.I79 S28 2020
Dewey Decimal Classification
759.952 J25s
Summary
"In 1760, when the Japanese painter Ito Jakuchu was working on his magnum opus, Plants and Animals in Color, he stated that it would probably take a thousand years for his paintings to be properly appreciated. This declaration was an expression of the unshakable confidence he had in the timeless artistic value of his work. As it turned out, however, the Japanese art world would long treat Jakuchu as a kind of eccentric, not as a principal figure in the art history of Japan. Recently, however, this view of Jakuchu has begun to crumble. With the holding of large Jakuchu exhibitions in Japan and abroad, foreign art lovers and young Japanese untainted by older preconceptions have discovered a new freshness in the extraordinarily minute depictions of Jakuchu's plants and animals. They have discovered that Jakuchu can have a bewitching effect on modern sensibilities. Jakuchu lived during the eighteen century, the golden age of art in the Edo period (1603-1868), a time when some of the greatest artistic names vied for originality in the pictorial arts. Born into a family of vegetable retailers, Jakuchu developed an interest in painting and began his self-education in the art by studying the Kano style then predominant in Japan as well as old Chinese classics from the Yuan and Ming dynasties. He also studied the meticulously depicted bird-and-flower paintings of the Qing dynasty, and taking nature as his teacher, he began making thoroughgoing sketches of natural phenomena. He eventually established his own richly colored style of painting that portrayed the multitudinous plants and animals of the natural world. This style is firmly based on the Japanese art of his period and geographical area, but it also, as the author states, "marks a certain high point in the history of East Asian painting." The present book includes full-color illustrations of Jakuchu's lifework (the thirty scrolls of Plants and Animals in Color) as well as other important paintings, arranged chronologically and accompanied by commentary from a variety of perspectives." -- Publisher's description
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Added Author
Series
Japan library (Shuppan Bunka Sangyō Shinkō Zaidan)
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Waiting a Thousand Years for Recognition
From Merchant to Painter
Early Works
Colorful Realm of Living Beings
Suibokuga and Woodblock Prints
His Later Years Brim with Curiosity
Itō Jakuchū and the Splendor of Mid-Edo Painting
From Merchant to Painter
Early Works
Colorful Realm of Living Beings
Suibokuga and Woodblock Prints
His Later Years Brim with Curiosity
Itō Jakuchū and the Splendor of Mid-Edo Painting