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Japonisme

Japonisme[a] is a French term that refers to the popularity and influence of Japanese art and design among a number of Western European artists in the nineteenth century following the forced reopening of foreign trade with Japan in 1858.[1][2] Japonisme was first described by French art critic and collector Philippe Burty in 1872.[3]

Young Ladies Looking at Japanese Objects by the painter James Tissot in 1869 is a representation of the popular curiosity about all Japanese items that started with the opening of the country in the Meiji Restoration of the 1860s.

While the effects of the trend were likely most pronounced in the visual arts, they extended to architecture, landscaping and gardening, and clothing.[4] Even the performing arts were affected; Gilbert & Sullivan's The Mikado is perhaps the best example.

Window of La Pagode (Paris), built in 1896

From the 1860s, ukiyo-e, Japanese woodblock prints, became a source of inspiration for many Western artists.[5] These prints were created for the commercial market in Japan.[5] Although a percentage of prints were brought to the West through Dutch trade merchants, it was not until the 1860s that ukiyo-e prints gained popularity in Europe.[5] Western artists were intrigued by the original use of color and composition. Ukiyo-e prints featured dramatic foreshortening and asymmetrical compositions.[6]

Japanese decorative arts, including ceramics, enamels, metalwork, and lacquerware, were as influential in the West as the graphic arts.[7] During the Meiji era (1868–1912), Japanese pottery was exported around the world.[8] From a long history of making weapons for samurai, Japanese metalworkers had achieved an expressive range of colours by combining and finishing metal alloys.[9] Japanese cloissoné enamel reached its "golden age" from 1890 to 1910,[10] producing items more advanced than ever before.[11] These items were widely visible in nineteenth-century Europe: a succession of world's fairs displayed Japanese decorative art to millions,[12][13] and it was picked up by galleries and fashionable stores.[7] Writings by critics, collectors, and artists expressed considerable excitement about this "new" art.[7] Collectors including Siegfried Bing[14] and Christopher Dresser[15] displayed and wrote about these works. Thus Japanese styles and themes reappeared in the work of Western artists and craftsmen.[7]

History edit

Seclusion (1639–1858) edit

 
Commode (commode à vantaux) in the Louis XVI style, made in France, using Japanese lacquer panels, c.1790, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

During most of the Edo period (1603–1867), Japan was in a time of seclusion and only one international port remained active.[16] Tokugawa Iemitsu ordered that an island, Dejima, be built off the shores of Nagasaki from which Japan could receive imports.[16] The Dutch were the only Westerners able to engage in trade with the Japanese, yet this small amount of contact still allowed for Japanese art to influence the West.[17] Every year the Dutch arrived in Japan with fleets of ships filled with Western goods for trade.[18] The cargo included many Dutch treatises on painting and a number of Dutch prints.[18] Shiba Kōkan (1747–1818) was one of the Japanese artists who studied the imports.[18] Kōkan created one of the first etchings in Japan which was a technique he had learned from one of the imported treatises.[18] Kōkan combined the technique of linear perspective, which he learned from a treatise, with his own ukiyo-e styled paintings.

Early exports edit

 
Kakiemon teapot, an example of Japanese export porcelain, 1670–1690, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

The primary Japanese exports were initially silver, which was prohibited after 1668, and gold, mostly in the form of oval coins, which was prohibited after 1763, and later copper in the form of copper bars. Japanese exports eventually decreased and shifted to craftwork such as ceramics, hand fans, paper, furniture, swords, armors, mother-of-pearl objects, folding screens, and lacquerware, which were already being exported.[19]

During the era of seclusion, Japanese goods remained a luxury sought after by European elites.[20] The production of Japanese porcelain increased in the seventeenth century, after Korean potters were brought to the Kyushu area.[21] The immigrants, their descendants, and Japanese counterparts unearthed kaolin clay mines and began to make high quality pottery. The blend of traditions evolved into a distinct Japanese industry with styles such as Imari ware and Kakiemon. They would later influence European and Chinese potters.[20] The exporting of porcelain was further boosted by the effects of the Ming-Qing transition, which immobilized the center of Chinese porcelain production in Jingdezhen for several decades. Japanese potters filled the void making porcelain for European tastes.[20] Porcelain and lacquered objects became the main exports from Japan to Europe.[22] An extravagant way to display porcelain in a home was to create a porcelain room with shelves placed throughout to show off the exotic wares,[22] but the ownership of a few pieces was possible for a wide and increasing social range of the middle class. Marie Antoinette and Maria Theresa are known collectors of Japanese lacquerware, and their collections are often exhibited in the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles.[23] The European imitation of Asian lacquerwork is referred to as Japanning.[24]

Re-opening (19th century) edit

During the Kaei era (1848–1854), after more than 200 years of seclusion, foreign merchant ships of various nationalities began to visit Japan. Following the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Japan ended a long period of national isolation and became open to imports from the West, including photography and printing techniques. With this new opening in trade, Japanese art and artifacts began to appear in small curiosity shops in Paris and London.[25] Japonisme began as a craze for collecting Japanese art, particularly ukiyo-e. Some of the first samples of ukiyo-e were seen in Paris.[26]

During this time, European artists were seeking alternatives to the strict European academic methodologies.[27] Around 1856, the French artist Félix Bracquemond encountered a copy of the sketch book Hokusai Manga at the workshop of his printer, Auguste Delâtre.[28] In the years following this discovery, there was an increase of interest in Japanese prints. They were sold in curiosity shops, tea warehouses, and larger shops.[28] Shops such as La Porte Chinoise specialized in the sale of Japanese and Chinese imports.[28] La Porte Chinoise, in particular, attracted artists James Abbott McNeill Whistler, Édouard Manet, and Edgar Degas who drew inspiration from the prints.[29] It and other shops organized gatherings which facilitated the spread of information regarding Japanese art and techniques.[27]

Artists and Japonisme edit

Ukiyo-e prints were one of the main Japanese influences on Western art. Western artists were inspired by different uses of compositional space, flattening of planes, and abstract approaches to color. An emphasis on diagonals, asymmetry, and negative space can be seen in the works of Western artists who were influenced by this style.[30]

Vincent van Gogh edit

 
Portrait of Père Tanguy by Vincent van Gogh, an example of Ukiyo-e influence in Western art (1887)

Vincent van Gogh's interest in Japanese prints began when he discovered illustrations by Félix Régamey featured in The Illustrated London News and Le Monde Illustré.[31] Régamey created woodblock prints, followed Japanese techniques, and often depicted scenes of Japanese life.[31] Van Gogh used Régamey as a reliable source for the artistic practices and everyday scenes of Japanese life. Beginning in 1885, Van Gogh switched from collecting magazine illustrations, such as Régamey, to collecting ukiyo-e prints which could be bought in small Parisian shops.[31] He shared these prints with his contemporaries and organized a Japanese print exhibition in Paris in 1887.[31]

Van Gogh's Portrait of Père Tanguy (1887) is a portrait of his color merchant, Julien Tanguy. Van Gogh created two versions of this portrait. Both versions feature backdrops of Japanese prints[32] by identifiable artists like Hiroshige and Kunisada. Inspired by Japanese woodblock prints and their colorful palettes, Van Gogh incorporated a similar vibrancy into his own works.[33] He filled the portrait of Tanguy with vibrant colors as he believed that buyers were no longer interested in grey-toned Dutch paintings and that paintings with many colors would be considered modern and desirable.[33]

Alfred Stevens edit

 
La parisienne japonaise by Alfred Stevens (1872)

The Belgian painter Alfred Stevens was one of the earliest collectors and enthusiasts of Japanese art in Paris.[34][35] Objects from Stevens' studio illustrate his fascination with Japanese and exotic knick-knacks and furniture. Stevens was close with Manet and to James McNeill Whistler,[36] with whom he shared this interest early on. Many of his contemporaries were similarly enthused, especially after the 1862 International Exhibition in London and the International Exposition of 1867 in Paris, where Japanese art and objects appeared for the first time.[36]

From the mid-1860's, Japonisme became a fundamental element in many of Stevens' paintings. One of his most famous Japonisme-influenced works is La parisienne japonaise (1872). He realized several portraits of young women dressed in kimono, and Japanese elements feature in many other paintings of his, such as the early La Dame en Rose (1866), which combines a view of a fashionably dressed woman in an interior with a detailed examination of Japanese objects, and The Psyché (1871), wherein on a chair there sit Japanese prints, indicating his artistic passion.[37]

Edgar Degas edit

 
Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Etruscan Gallery, 1879–1880. Aquatint, drypoint, soft-ground etching, and etching with burnishing, 26.8 × 23.6 cm.

In the 1860s, Edgar Degas began to collect Japanese prints from La Porte Chinoise and other small print shops in Paris.[38] His contemporaries had begun to collect prints as well, which gave him a wide array of sources for inspiration.[38] Among prints shown to Degas was a copy of Hokusai's Manga, which Bracquemond had purchased after seeing it in Delâtre's workshop.[27] The estimated date of Degas' adoption of japonismes into his prints is 1875, and it can be seen in his choice to divide individual scenes by placing barriers vertically, diagonally, and horizontally.[38]

Similar to many Japanese artists, Degas' prints focus on women and their daily routines.[39] The atypical positioning of his female figures and the dedication to reality in his prints aligned him with Japanese printmakers such as Hokusai, Utamaro, and Sukenobu.[39] In Degas' print Mary Cassatt at the Louvre: The Etruscan Gallery (1879–80), the artist uses of two figures, one seated and one standing, which is a common composition in Japanese prints.[40] Degas also continued to use lines to create depth and separate space within the scene.[40] His most clear appropriation is of the woman leaning on a closed umbrella, which is borrowed directly from Hokusai's Manga.[41]

James McNeill Whistler edit

Japanese art was exhibited in Britain beginning in the early 1850s.[42] These exhibitions featured various Japanese objects, including maps, letters, textiles, and objects from everyday life.[43] These exhibitions served as a source of national pride for Britain and served to create a separate Japanese identity apart from the generalized "Orient" cultural identity.[44]

James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American artist who worked primarily in Britain. During the late 19th century, Whistler began to reject the Realist style of painting that his contemporaries favored. Instead, he found simplicity and technicality in the Japanese aesthetic.[45] Rather than copying specific artists and artworks, Whistler was influenced by general Japanese methods of articulation and composition, which he integrated into his works.[45]

Artists influenced by Japanese art and culture edit

Artist Date of birth Date of death Nationality Style
Alfred Stevens 1823 1906 Belgian Realism, Genre painting
James Tissot 1836 1902 French Genre Art, Realism
James McNeill Whistler 1834 1903 American Tonalism, Realism, Impressionism
Édouard Manet 1832 1883 French Realism, Impressionism
Claude Monet 1840 1926 French Impressionism
Vincent van Gogh 1853 1890 Dutch Post-Impressionism
Edgar Degas 1834 1917 French Impressionism
Pierre-Auguste Renoir 1841 1919 French Impressionism
Camille Pissarro 1830 1903 Danish-French Impressionism, Post-Impressionism
Paul Gauguin 1848 1903 French Post-Impressionism, Primitivism
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 1864 1901 French Post-Impressionism, Art Nouveau
Mary Cassatt 1844 1926 American Impressionism
George Hendrik Breitner 1857 1923 Dutch Amsterdam Impressionism
Bertha Lum 1869 1954 American Japanese Styled Prints
William Bradley 1801 1857 English Portrait
Aubrey Beardsley 1872 1898 English Art Nouveau, Aestheticism
Arthur Wesley Dow 1857 1922 American Arts and Crafts Revival, Japanese Styled Prints
Gustave Léonard de Jonghe 1829 1893 Belgian Social Realism, Realism, Orientalism
Alphonse Mucha 1860 1939 Czech Art Nouveau
Gustav Klimt 1862 1918 Austrian Art Nouveau, Symbolism
Pierre Bonnard 1867 1947 French Post-Impressionism
Frank Lloyd Wright 1867 1959 American Prairie School
Charles Rennie Mackintosh 1868 1928 Scottish Symbolism, Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau, Glasgow Style
Louis Comfort Tiffany 1848 1933 American Jewelry and glass designer
Helen Hyde 1868 1919 American Japanese Styled Prints
Georges Ferdinand Bigot 1860 1927 French Cartoon

Theater edit

The first popular stagings of Asia were depictions of Japan from England. The comic opera Kosiki (originally titled The Mikado but renamed after protest from Japan) was written in 1876. In 1885, Gilbert and Sullivan, apparently less concerned about Japanese perceptions, premiered their Mikado. This comic opera enjoyed immense popularity throughout Europe where seventeen companies performed it 9,000 times within two years of its premiere. Translated into German in 1887, The Mikado remained the most popular drama in Germany throughout the 1890s. In the wake of this popularity, comedies set in Asia and featuring comic Asian figures appeared in rapid succession, both in comic opera and drama.

 
Advertising poster for the comic opera The Mikado, which was set in Japan (1885)

The successor to The Mikado as Europe's most popular Japan drama, Sidney Jones' opera The Geisha (1896) added the title character to the stock characters representing Japan, the figure of the geisha belongs to the "objects" which in and of themselves meant Japan in Germany and throughout the West. The period from 1904 to 1918 saw a European boom in geisha dramas. The most famous of these was, Puccini's opera Madama Butterfly. In 1900, Puccini saw a staging of David Belasco's play of the same name and reportedly found it so moving that he wept. The popularity of the opera brought on a slew of Madame Something or Others, including Madames Cherry, Espirit, Flott, Flirt, Wig-Wag, Leichtsinn, and Tip Top, all of whom appeared around 1904 and disappeared relatively quickly. They were not without lasting effect, however, and the geisha had established herself among the scrolls, jade, and images of Mount Fuji that signified Japan to the West. Much as this human figure of the geisha was reduced to the level of other objects signifying Japan in the drama, Japanese performers in Germany served German play wrights in their quest to renew the German drama. Just as ukiyo-e had proven useful in France, severed from any understanding of Japan, the troupes of Japanese actors and dancers that toured Europe provided materials for "a new way of dramatizing" on stage. Ironically, the popularity and influence of these Japanese dramas had a great deal to do with the westernization of the Japanese theater in general and of the pieces performed in Europe in particular.

Invented for the Kabuki theatre in Japan in the 18th century, the revolving stage was introduced into Western theater at the Residenz theatre in Munich in 1896 under the influence of japonism fever. The Japanese influence on German drama first appeared in stage design. Karl Lautenschlager adopted the Kabuki revolving stage in 1896 and ten years later Max Reinhardt employed it in the premiere of Frühlings Erwachen by Frank Wedekind. Soon this revolving stage was a trend in Berlin. Another adaptation of the Kabuki stage popular among German directors was the Blumensteg, a jutting extension of the stage into the audience. The European acquaintance with Kabuki came either from travels in Japan or from texts, but also from Japanese troupes touring Europe. In 1893, Kawakami Otojiro and his troupe of actors arrived in Paris, returning again in 1900 and playing in Berlin in 1902. Kawakami's troop performed two pieces, Kesa and Shogun, both of which were westernized and were performed without music and with the majority of the dialogue eliminated. This being the case, these performances tended toward pantomime and dance. Dramatists and critics quickly latched on to what they saw as a “re-theatricalization of the theater.” Among the actors in these plays was Sada Yacco, first Japanese star in Europe, who influenced pioneers of modern dance such as Loie Fuller and Isadora Duncan; she performed for Queen Victoria in 1900, and enjoyed the status of a European star.[46][47]

Japanese gardens edit

 
Claude Monet's garden in Giverny with the Japanese footbridge and the water lily pool (1899)

The aesthetic of Japanese gardens was introduced to the English-speaking world by Josiah Conder's Landscape Gardening in Japan (Kelly & Walsh, 1893), which sparked the first Japanese gardens in the West. A second edition was published in 1912.[48] Conder's principles have sometimes proved hard to follow:[citation needed]

Robbed of its local garb and mannerisms, the Japanese method reveals aesthetic principles applicable to the gardens of any country, teaching, as it does, how to convert into a poem or picture a composition, which, with all its variety of detail, otherwise lacks unity and intent.[49]

Tassa (Saburo) Eida created several influential gardens, two for the Japan–British Exhibition in London in 1910 and one built over four years for William Walker, 1st Baron Wavertree.[50] The latter can still be visited at the Irish National Stud.[51]

Samuel Newsom's Japanese Garden Construction (1939) offered Japanese aesthetics as a corrective in the construction of rock gardens, which owed their quite separate origins in the West to the mid-19th century desire to grow alpines in an approximation of Alpine scree. According to the Garden History Society, Japanese landscape gardener Seyemon Kusumoto was involved in the development of around 200 gardens in the UK. In 1937, he exhibited a rock garden at the Chelsea Flower Show, and worked on the Burngreave Estate at Bognor Regis, a Japanese garden at Cottered in Hertfordshire, and courtyards at Du Cane Court in London.

The impressionist painter Claude Monet modelled parts of his garden in Giverny after Japanese elements, such as the bridge over the lily pond, which he painted numerous times. In this series, by detailing just on a few select points such as the bridge or the lilies, he was influenced by traditional Japanese visual methods found in ukiyo-e prints, of which he had a large collection.[52][53][54] He also planted a large number of native Japanese species to give it a more exotic feeling.

Museums edit

In the United States, the fascination with Japanese art extended to collectors and museums creating significant collections which still exist and have influenced many generations of artists. The epicenter was in Boston, likely due to Isabella Stewart Gardner, a pioneering collector of Asian art.[55] As a result, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston now claims to house the finest collection of Japanese art outside Japan.[56] The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery house the largest Asian art research library in the United States, where they house Japanese art together with the Japanese-influenced works of Whistler.

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ From the French Japonisme, French pronunciation: [ʒa.pɔ.nism]

References edit

References
  1. ^ "Japonism". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 7 June 2013.
  2. ^ "Commodore Perry and Japan (1853–1854) | Asia for Educators | Columbia University". afe.easia.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-02.
  3. ^ Ono 2003, p. 1
  4. ^ Davis, Aaron, "Japanese Influence On Western Architecture Part 2: The Early Craftsmen Movement" Nakamoto Forestry, May 28, 2019; accessed 2020.09.16.
  5. ^ a b c Bickford, Lawrence (1993). "Ukiyo-e Print History". Impressions (17): 1. JSTOR 42597774.
  6. ^ Ono 2003, p. 45
  7. ^ a b c d Irvine 2013, p. 11.
  8. ^ Earle 1999, p. 330.
  9. ^ Earle 1999, p. 66.
  10. ^ Irvine 2013, p. 177.
  11. ^ Earle 1999, p. 252.
  12. ^ Irvine 2013, pp. 26–38.
  13. ^ Earle 1999, p. 10.
  14. ^ Irvine 2013, p. 36.
  15. ^ Irvine 2013, p. 38.
  16. ^ a b Lambourne 2005, p. 13
  17. ^ Gianfreda, Sandra. "Introduction." In Monet, Gauguin, Van Gogh… Japanese Inspirations, edited by Museum Folkwang, Essen, 14. Gottingen: Folkwang/Steidl, 2014.
  18. ^ a b c d Lambourne 2005, p. 14
  19. ^ Wichmann, Siegfried (2007). Japonisme: the Japanese influence on Western art since 1858. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28163-5. OCLC 315522043.
  20. ^ a b c Lambourne 2005, p. 16
  21. ^ Nogami, Takenori (2013). "Japanese Porcelain in the Philippines". Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society. 41 (1/2): 101–121. ISSN 0115-0243. JSTOR 43854721.
  22. ^ a b Chisaburo, Yamada. "Exchange of Influences in the Fine Arts between Japan and Europe." Japonisme in Art: An International Symposium (1980): 14.
  23. ^ "Marie Antoinette and Japanese lacquer". vogue.com. 20 January 2018. Retrieved 2021-04-24.
  24. ^ "A Study of the Methods and Operations of Japanning Practice". Automotive Industries (42): 669. 11 Mar 1920.
  25. ^ Cate et al. 1975, p. 1
  26. ^ Yvonne Thirion, "Le japonisme en France dans la seconde moitié du XIXe siècle à la faveur de la diffusion de l'estampe japonaise", 1961, Cahiers de l'Association internationale des études francaises, Volume 13, Numéro 13, pp. 117–130. DOI 10.3406/caief.1961.2193
  27. ^ a b c Breuer 2010, p. 68
  28. ^ a b c Cate et al. 1975, p. 3
  29. ^ Cate et al. 1975, p. 4
  30. ^ Breuer 2010, p. 41
  31. ^ a b c d Thomson 2014, p. 70
  32. ^ Thomson 2014, p. 71
  33. ^ a b Thomson 2014, p. 72
  34. ^ Stevens ging als geen ander mee met het toentertijd sterk in mode zijnde Japonisme.
  35. ^ Thomas, Bernadette. "Alfred (Emile-Léopold) Stevens" in Oxford Art Online. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  36. ^ a b Marjan Sterckx. "Alfred Stevens". Association of Historians of Nineteenth-Century Art. Retrieved 10 September 2020.
  37. ^ "The Psyché (My Studio), ca. 1871". Princeton University Art Museum. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  38. ^ a b c Cate et al. 1975, p. 12
  39. ^ a b Cate et al. 1975, p. 13
  40. ^ a b Breuer 2010, p. 75
  41. ^ Breuer 2010, p. 78
  42. ^ Ono 2003, p. 5
  43. ^ Ono 2003, p. 8
  44. ^ Ono 2003, p. 6
  45. ^ a b Ono 2003, p. 42
  46. ^ Maltarich, Bill (2005). Samurai and supermen : national socialist views of Japan. Oxford: P. Lang. ISBN 3-03910-303-2. OCLC 59359992.
  47. ^ "International Conference". www.jsme.or.jp. Retrieved 2020-12-28.
  48. ^ Slawson 1987, p. 15 and note2.
  49. ^ Conder quoted in Slawson 1987, p. 15.
  50. ^ Britain and Japan: Biographical Portraits. Global Oriental. 2010. p. 503.
  51. ^ "Japanese Garden". Irish National Stud. 19 May 2017. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  52. ^ "Giverny | Collection of japanese prints of Claude Monet". Giverny hébergement, hôtels, chambres d'hôtes, gîtes, restaurants, informations, artistes... 2013-11-30. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  53. ^ Genevieve Aitken, Marianne Delafond. La collection d'estampes Japonaises de Claude Monet. La Bibliotheque des Arts. 2003. ISBN 978-2884531092
  54. ^ "The japanese prints". The Claude Monet Foundation. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  55. ^ Chong, Alan (2009). Journeys east: Isabella Stewart Gardner and Asia. Murai, Noriko., Guth, Christine., Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. [Boston]: Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. ISBN 978-1-934772-75-1. OCLC 294884928.
  56. ^ "Art of Asia". Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. 2010-10-15. Retrieved 2017-09-27.
  57. ^ "George Hendrik Breitner – Girl in White Kimono". Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. Archived from the original on 9 September 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
Sources
  • Breuer, Karin (2010). Japanesque: The Japanese Print in the Era of Impressionism. New York: Prestel Publishing.
  • Cate, Phillip Dennis; Eidelberg, Martin; Johnston, William R.; Needham, Gerald; Weisberg, Gabriel P. (1975). Japonisme: Japanese Influence on French Art 1854–1910. Kent State University Press.
  • Earle, Joe (1999). Splendors of Meiji: treasures of imperial Japan: masterpieces from the Khalili Collection. St. Petersburg, Fla.: Broughton International Inc. ISBN 1-874780-13-7. OCLC 42476594.
  • Irvine, Gregory, ed. (2013). Japonisme and the rise of the modern art movement: the arts of the Meiji period: the Khalili collection. New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-23913-1. OCLC 853452453.
  • Lambourne, Lionel (2005). Japonisme: cultural crossings between Japan and the West. New York: Phaidon.
  • Ono, Ayako (2003). Japonisme in Britain: Whistler, Menpes, Henry, Hornel and nineteenth-century Japan. New York: Routledge Curzon.
  • Slawson, David A. (1987). Secret Teachings in the Art of Japanese Gardens. New York/Tokyo: Kodansha.
  • Thomson, Belinda (2014). "Japonisme in the Works of Van Gogh, Gauguin, Bernard and Anquetin". In Museum Folkwang (ed.). Monet, Gauguin, Van Gogh… Japanese Inspirations. Folkwang/Steidl.

Further reading edit

  • Cluzel, Jean-Sébastien (editor), Adamson, John (translator). Japonisme and Architecture in France, 1550–1930 (Éditions Faton, 2022) ISBN 978-2-87844-307-3.
  • Rümelin, Christian, and Ellis Tinios. The Japanese and French Print in the Era of Impressionism (2013)
  • Scheyer, Ernst. “Far Eastern Art and French Impressionism,” The Art Quarterly 6#2 (Spring, 1943): 116–143.
  • Weisberg, Gabriel P. "Reflecting on Japonisme: The State of the Discipline in the Visual Arts." Journal of Japonisme 1.1 (2016): 3–16.
  • Weisberg, Gabriel P. and Yvonne M.L. Weisberg. Japonisme, An Annotated Bibliography (1990).
  • Wichmann, Siegfried. Japonisme. The Japanese Influence on Western Art in the 19th and 20th Centuries (Harmony Books, 1981).
  • Widar, Halen. Christopher Dresser. (1990).
  • Thesis: Edo print art and its Western interpretations (PDF)

External links edit

  • "Japonisme" from the Metropolitan Museum of Art Timeline of Art History
  • "Orientalism, Absence, and Quick~Firing Guns:The Emergence of Japan as a Western Text"
  • "Japonisme: Exploration and Celebration"
  • The Private Collection of Edgar Degas, fully digitized text from The Metropolitan Museum of Art libraries; contains essay Degas, Japanese Prints, and Japonisme (pgs 247–260)

japonisme, japonesque, japonism, redirect, here, koda, kumi, album, japonesque, album, arashi, album, japonism, album, japonaiserie, redirects, here, gogh, series, japonaiserie, gogh, french, term, that, refers, popularity, influence, japanese, design, among, . Japonesque and Japonism redirect here For the Koda Kumi album see Japonesque album For the Arashi album see Japonism album Japonaiserie redirects here For the Van Gogh series see Japonaiserie Van Gogh Japonisme a is a French term that refers to the popularity and influence of Japanese art and design among a number of Western European artists in the nineteenth century following the forced reopening of foreign trade with Japan in 1858 1 2 Japonisme was first described by French art critic and collector Philippe Burty in 1872 3 Young Ladies Looking at Japanese Objects by the painter James Tissot in 1869 is a representation of the popular curiosity about all Japanese items that started with the opening of the country in the Meiji Restoration of the 1860s While the effects of the trend were likely most pronounced in the visual arts they extended to architecture landscaping and gardening and clothing 4 Even the performing arts were affected Gilbert amp Sullivan s The Mikado is perhaps the best example Window of La Pagode Paris built in 1896From the 1860s ukiyo e Japanese woodblock prints became a source of inspiration for many Western artists 5 These prints were created for the commercial market in Japan 5 Although a percentage of prints were brought to the West through Dutch trade merchants it was not until the 1860s that ukiyo e prints gained popularity in Europe 5 Western artists were intrigued by the original use of color and composition Ukiyo e prints featured dramatic foreshortening and asymmetrical compositions 6 Japanese decorative arts including ceramics enamels metalwork and lacquerware were as influential in the West as the graphic arts 7 During the Meiji era 1868 1912 Japanese pottery was exported around the world 8 From a long history of making weapons for samurai Japanese metalworkers had achieved an expressive range of colours by combining and finishing metal alloys 9 Japanese cloissone enamel reached its golden age from 1890 to 1910 10 producing items more advanced than ever before 11 These items were widely visible in nineteenth century Europe a succession of world s fairs displayed Japanese decorative art to millions 12 13 and it was picked up by galleries and fashionable stores 7 Writings by critics collectors and artists expressed considerable excitement about this new art 7 Collectors including Siegfried Bing 14 and Christopher Dresser 15 displayed and wrote about these works Thus Japanese styles and themes reappeared in the work of Western artists and craftsmen 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Seclusion 1639 1858 1 1 1 Early exports 1 2 Re opening 19th century 2 Artists and Japonisme 2 1 Vincent van Gogh 2 2 Alfred Stevens 2 3 Edgar Degas 2 4 James McNeill Whistler 2 5 Artists influenced by Japanese art and culture 3 Theater 4 Japanese gardens 5 Museums 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editSeclusion 1639 1858 edit Further information Orientalism in early modern France nbsp Commode commode a vantaux in the Louis XVI style made in France using Japanese lacquer panels c 1790 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York CityDuring most of the Edo period 1603 1867 Japan was in a time of seclusion and only one international port remained active 16 Tokugawa Iemitsu ordered that an island Dejima be built off the shores of Nagasaki from which Japan could receive imports 16 The Dutch were the only Westerners able to engage in trade with the Japanese yet this small amount of contact still allowed for Japanese art to influence the West 17 Every year the Dutch arrived in Japan with fleets of ships filled with Western goods for trade 18 The cargo included many Dutch treatises on painting and a number of Dutch prints 18 Shiba Kōkan 1747 1818 was one of the Japanese artists who studied the imports 18 Kōkan created one of the first etchings in Japan which was a technique he had learned from one of the imported treatises 18 Kōkan combined the technique of linear perspective which he learned from a treatise with his own ukiyo e styled paintings Early exports edit Main article Japanese export porcelain Main article Japanese lacquerware nbsp Kakiemon teapot an example of Japanese export porcelain 1670 1690 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam the NetherlandsThe primary Japanese exports were initially silver which was prohibited after 1668 and gold mostly in the form of oval coins which was prohibited after 1763 and later copper in the form of copper bars Japanese exports eventually decreased and shifted to craftwork such as ceramics hand fans paper furniture swords armors mother of pearl objects folding screens and lacquerware which were already being exported 19 During the era of seclusion Japanese goods remained a luxury sought after by European elites 20 The production of Japanese porcelain increased in the seventeenth century after Korean potters were brought to the Kyushu area 21 The immigrants their descendants and Japanese counterparts unearthed kaolin clay mines and began to make high quality pottery The blend of traditions evolved into a distinct Japanese industry with styles such as Imari ware and Kakiemon They would later influence European and Chinese potters 20 The exporting of porcelain was further boosted by the effects of the Ming Qing transition which immobilized the center of Chinese porcelain production in Jingdezhen for several decades Japanese potters filled the void making porcelain for European tastes 20 Porcelain and lacquered objects became the main exports from Japan to Europe 22 An extravagant way to display porcelain in a home was to create a porcelain room with shelves placed throughout to show off the exotic wares 22 but the ownership of a few pieces was possible for a wide and increasing social range of the middle class Marie Antoinette and Maria Theresa are known collectors of Japanese lacquerware and their collections are often exhibited in the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles 23 The European imitation of Asian lacquerwork is referred to as Japanning 24 Re opening 19th century edit During the Kaei era 1848 1854 after more than 200 years of seclusion foreign merchant ships of various nationalities began to visit Japan Following the Meiji Restoration in 1868 Japan ended a long period of national isolation and became open to imports from the West including photography and printing techniques With this new opening in trade Japanese art and artifacts began to appear in small curiosity shops in Paris and London 25 Japonisme began as a craze for collecting Japanese art particularly ukiyo e Some of the first samples of ukiyo e were seen in Paris 26 During this time European artists were seeking alternatives to the strict European academic methodologies 27 Around 1856 the French artist Felix Bracquemond encountered a copy of the sketch book Hokusai Manga at the workshop of his printer Auguste Delatre 28 In the years following this discovery there was an increase of interest in Japanese prints They were sold in curiosity shops tea warehouses and larger shops 28 Shops such as La Porte Chinoise specialized in the sale of Japanese and Chinese imports 28 La Porte Chinoise in particular attracted artists James Abbott McNeill Whistler Edouard Manet and Edgar Degas who drew inspiration from the prints 29 It and other shops organized gatherings which facilitated the spread of information regarding Japanese art and techniques 27 Artists and Japonisme editUkiyo e prints were one of the main Japanese influences on Western art Western artists were inspired by different uses of compositional space flattening of planes and abstract approaches to color An emphasis on diagonals asymmetry and negative space can be seen in the works of Western artists who were influenced by this style 30 Vincent van Gogh edit Main article Japonaiserie Van Gogh nbsp Portrait of Pere Tanguy by Vincent van Gogh an example of Ukiyo e influence in Western art 1887 Vincent van Gogh s interest in Japanese prints began when he discovered illustrations by Felix Regamey featured in The Illustrated London News and Le Monde Illustre 31 Regamey created woodblock prints followed Japanese techniques and often depicted scenes of Japanese life 31 Van Gogh used Regamey as a reliable source for the artistic practices and everyday scenes of Japanese life Beginning in 1885 Van Gogh switched from collecting magazine illustrations such as Regamey to collecting ukiyo e prints which could be bought in small Parisian shops 31 He shared these prints with his contemporaries and organized a Japanese print exhibition in Paris in 1887 31 Van Gogh s Portrait of Pere Tanguy 1887 is a portrait of his color merchant Julien Tanguy Van Gogh created two versions of this portrait Both versions feature backdrops of Japanese prints 32 by identifiable artists like Hiroshige and Kunisada Inspired by Japanese woodblock prints and their colorful palettes Van Gogh incorporated a similar vibrancy into his own works 33 He filled the portrait of Tanguy with vibrant colors as he believed that buyers were no longer interested in grey toned Dutch paintings and that paintings with many colors would be considered modern and desirable 33 Alfred Stevens edit nbsp La parisienne japonaise by Alfred Stevens 1872 The Belgian painter Alfred Stevens was one of the earliest collectors and enthusiasts of Japanese art in Paris 34 35 Objects from Stevens studio illustrate his fascination with Japanese and exotic knick knacks and furniture Stevens was close with Manet and to James McNeill Whistler 36 with whom he shared this interest early on Many of his contemporaries were similarly enthused especially after the 1862 International Exhibition in London and the International Exposition of 1867 in Paris where Japanese art and objects appeared for the first time 36 From the mid 1860 s Japonisme became a fundamental element in many of Stevens paintings One of his most famous Japonisme influenced works is La parisienne japonaise 1872 He realized several portraits of young women dressed in kimono and Japanese elements feature in many other paintings of his such as the early La Dame en Rose 1866 which combines a view of a fashionably dressed woman in an interior with a detailed examination of Japanese objects and The Psyche 1871 wherein on a chair there sit Japanese prints indicating his artistic passion 37 Edgar Degas edit nbsp Edgar Degas Mary Cassatt at the Louvre The Etruscan Gallery 1879 1880 Aquatint drypoint soft ground etching and etching with burnishing 26 8 23 6 cm In the 1860s Edgar Degas began to collect Japanese prints from La Porte Chinoise and other small print shops in Paris 38 His contemporaries had begun to collect prints as well which gave him a wide array of sources for inspiration 38 Among prints shown to Degas was a copy of Hokusai s Manga which Bracquemond had purchased after seeing it in Delatre s workshop 27 The estimated date of Degas adoption of japonismes into his prints is 1875 and it can be seen in his choice to divide individual scenes by placing barriers vertically diagonally and horizontally 38 Similar to many Japanese artists Degas prints focus on women and their daily routines 39 The atypical positioning of his female figures and the dedication to reality in his prints aligned him with Japanese printmakers such as Hokusai Utamaro and Sukenobu 39 In Degas print Mary Cassatt at the Louvre The Etruscan Gallery 1879 80 the artist uses of two figures one seated and one standing which is a common composition in Japanese prints 40 Degas also continued to use lines to create depth and separate space within the scene 40 His most clear appropriation is of the woman leaning on a closed umbrella which is borrowed directly from Hokusai s Manga 41 James McNeill Whistler edit Japanese art was exhibited in Britain beginning in the early 1850s 42 These exhibitions featured various Japanese objects including maps letters textiles and objects from everyday life 43 These exhibitions served as a source of national pride for Britain and served to create a separate Japanese identity apart from the generalized Orient cultural identity 44 James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American artist who worked primarily in Britain During the late 19th century Whistler began to reject the Realist style of painting that his contemporaries favored Instead he found simplicity and technicality in the Japanese aesthetic 45 Rather than copying specific artists and artworks Whistler was influenced by general Japanese methods of articulation and composition which he integrated into his works 45 Artists influenced by Japanese art and culture edit Artist Date of birth Date of death Nationality StyleAlfred Stevens 1823 1906 Belgian Realism Genre paintingJames Tissot 1836 1902 French Genre Art RealismJames McNeill Whistler 1834 1903 American Tonalism Realism ImpressionismEdouard Manet 1832 1883 French Realism ImpressionismClaude Monet 1840 1926 French ImpressionismVincent van Gogh 1853 1890 Dutch Post ImpressionismEdgar Degas 1834 1917 French ImpressionismPierre Auguste Renoir 1841 1919 French ImpressionismCamille Pissarro 1830 1903 Danish French Impressionism Post ImpressionismPaul Gauguin 1848 1903 French Post Impressionism PrimitivismHenri de Toulouse Lautrec 1864 1901 French Post Impressionism Art NouveauMary Cassatt 1844 1926 American ImpressionismGeorge Hendrik Breitner 1857 1923 Dutch Amsterdam ImpressionismBertha Lum 1869 1954 American Japanese Styled PrintsWilliam Bradley 1801 1857 English PortraitAubrey Beardsley 1872 1898 English Art Nouveau AestheticismArthur Wesley Dow 1857 1922 American Arts and Crafts Revival Japanese Styled PrintsGustave Leonard de Jonghe 1829 1893 Belgian Social Realism Realism OrientalismAlphonse Mucha 1860 1939 Czech Art NouveauGustav Klimt 1862 1918 Austrian Art Nouveau SymbolismPierre Bonnard 1867 1947 French Post ImpressionismFrank Lloyd Wright 1867 1959 American Prairie SchoolCharles Rennie Mackintosh 1868 1928 Scottish Symbolism Arts and Crafts Art Nouveau Glasgow StyleLouis Comfort Tiffany 1848 1933 American Jewelry and glass designerHelen Hyde 1868 1919 American Japanese Styled PrintsGeorges Ferdinand Bigot 1860 1927 French CartoonTheater editThe first popular stagings of Asia were depictions of Japan from England The comic opera Kosiki originally titled The Mikado but renamed after protest from Japan was written in 1876 In 1885 Gilbert and Sullivan apparently less concerned about Japanese perceptions premiered their Mikado This comic opera enjoyed immense popularity throughout Europe where seventeen companies performed it 9 000 times within two years of its premiere Translated into German in 1887 The Mikado remained the most popular drama in Germany throughout the 1890s In the wake of this popularity comedies set in Asia and featuring comic Asian figures appeared in rapid succession both in comic opera and drama nbsp Advertising poster for the comic opera The Mikado which was set in Japan 1885 The successor to The Mikado as Europe s most popular Japan drama Sidney Jones opera The Geisha 1896 added the title character to the stock characters representing Japan the figure of the geisha belongs to the objects which in and of themselves meant Japan in Germany and throughout the West The period from 1904 to 1918 saw a European boom in geisha dramas The most famous of these was Puccini s opera Madama Butterfly In 1900 Puccini saw a staging of David Belasco s play of the same name and reportedly found it so moving that he wept The popularity of the opera brought on a slew of Madame Something or Others including Madames Cherry Espirit Flott Flirt Wig Wag Leichtsinn and Tip Top all of whom appeared around 1904 and disappeared relatively quickly They were not without lasting effect however and the geisha had established herself among the scrolls jade and images of Mount Fuji that signified Japan to the West Much as this human figure of the geisha was reduced to the level of other objects signifying Japan in the drama Japanese performers in Germany served German play wrights in their quest to renew the German drama Just as ukiyo e had proven useful in France severed from any understanding of Japan the troupes of Japanese actors and dancers that toured Europe provided materials for a new way of dramatizing on stage Ironically the popularity and influence of these Japanese dramas had a great deal to do with the westernization of the Japanese theater in general and of the pieces performed in Europe in particular Invented for the Kabuki theatre in Japan in the 18th century the revolving stage was introduced into Western theater at the Residenz theatre in Munich in 1896 under the influence of japonism fever The Japanese influence on German drama first appeared in stage design Karl Lautenschlager adopted the Kabuki revolving stage in 1896 and ten years later Max Reinhardt employed it in the premiere of Fruhlings Erwachen by Frank Wedekind Soon this revolving stage was a trend in Berlin Another adaptation of the Kabuki stage popular among German directors was the Blumensteg a jutting extension of the stage into the audience The European acquaintance with Kabuki came either from travels in Japan or from texts but also from Japanese troupes touring Europe In 1893 Kawakami Otojiro and his troupe of actors arrived in Paris returning again in 1900 and playing in Berlin in 1902 Kawakami s troop performed two pieces Kesa and Shogun both of which were westernized and were performed without music and with the majority of the dialogue eliminated This being the case these performances tended toward pantomime and dance Dramatists and critics quickly latched on to what they saw as a re theatricalization of the theater Among the actors in these plays was Sada Yacco first Japanese star in Europe who influenced pioneers of modern dance such as Loie Fuller and Isadora Duncan she performed for Queen Victoria in 1900 and enjoyed the status of a European star 46 47 Japanese gardens edit nbsp Claude Monet s garden in Giverny with the Japanese footbridge and the water lily pool 1899 The aesthetic of Japanese gardens was introduced to the English speaking world by Josiah Conder s Landscape Gardening in Japan Kelly amp Walsh 1893 which sparked the first Japanese gardens in the West A second edition was published in 1912 48 Conder s principles have sometimes proved hard to follow citation needed Robbed of its local garb and mannerisms the Japanese method reveals aesthetic principles applicable to the gardens of any country teaching as it does how to convert into a poem or picture a composition which with all its variety of detail otherwise lacks unity and intent 49 Tassa Saburo Eida created several influential gardens two for the Japan British Exhibition in London in 1910 and one built over four years for William Walker 1st Baron Wavertree 50 The latter can still be visited at the Irish National Stud 51 Samuel Newsom s Japanese Garden Construction 1939 offered Japanese aesthetics as a corrective in the construction of rock gardens which owed their quite separate origins in the West to the mid 19th century desire to grow alpines in an approximation of Alpine scree According to the Garden History Society Japanese landscape gardener Seyemon Kusumoto was involved in the development of around 200 gardens in the UK In 1937 he exhibited a rock garden at the Chelsea Flower Show and worked on the Burngreave Estate at Bognor Regis a Japanese garden at Cottered in Hertfordshire and courtyards at Du Cane Court in London The impressionist painter Claude Monet modelled parts of his garden in Giverny after Japanese elements such as the bridge over the lily pond which he painted numerous times In this series by detailing just on a few select points such as the bridge or the lilies he was influenced by traditional Japanese visual methods found in ukiyo e prints of which he had a large collection 52 53 54 He also planted a large number of native Japanese species to give it a more exotic feeling Museums editIn the United States the fascination with Japanese art extended to collectors and museums creating significant collections which still exist and have influenced many generations of artists The epicenter was in Boston likely due to Isabella Stewart Gardner a pioneering collector of Asian art 55 As a result the Museum of Fine Arts Boston now claims to house the finest collection of Japanese art outside Japan 56 The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M Sackler Gallery house the largest Asian art research library in the United States where they house Japanese art together with the Japanese influenced works of Whistler Gallery edit nbsp James McNeill Whistler The Peacock Room 1876 1877 nbsp James McNeill Whistler The Princess from the Land of Porcelain 1863 1865 nbsp Edouard Manet Portrait of Emile Zola 1868 nbsp Gustave Leonard de Jonghe The Japanese Fan c 1865 nbsp Alfred Stevens Girl Wearing a Kimono 1872 nbsp Large spill vase c 1872 nbsp James McNeill Whistler Nocturne in Blue and Gold Old Battersea Bridge 1872 1875 nbsp Christofle amp Cie and Emile Reiber chandelier vase 1874 nbsp Emile Reiber Grohe Brothers Eugene Capy Antoine Tard and Christofle amp Cie corner cabinet 1874 1878 nbsp Leon Dromard cabinet c 1874 1889 nbsp Claude Monet Madame Monet en costume Japonais 1875 nbsp Alfred Stevens Yamatori c 1878 nbsp Christofle amp Cie and Emile Reiber Elephant Vase 1878 nbsp Gabriel Viardot Paris pair of armchairs c 1880 nbsp Gabriel Viardot mirror with frame c 1880 nbsp Edouard Lievre and Maison Ferdinand Barbedienne jardiniere c 1880 nbsp Vincent van Gogh La courtisane after Keisai Eisen 1887 nbsp Vincent van Gogh The Blooming Plum Tree after Hiroshige s Plum Park in Kameido 1887 nbsp Mary Cassatt Woman Bathing La Toilette 1890 91 Drypoint and aquatint print nbsp Henri de Toulouse Lautrec lithograph poster of 1892 nbsp George Hendrik Breitner Girl in a White Kimono oil on canvas 1894 57 nbsp One of the 36 Views of the Eiffel Tower by Henri Riviere 1902 nbsp Odilon Redon The Buddha 1906 nbsp Gustav Klimt Lady with fan 1917 18 nbsp Miss Finney dancing Montreal Quebec 1923 nbsp Sideboard by Edward William Godwin c 1867 70 nbsp Carp vase by Eugene Rousseau fr 1878 1884 nbsp Japanese salon at Villa Hugel Vienna nbsp Japanese pagoda and garden of the Museums of the Far East Brussels nbsp Cover of the Madame Butterfly short story 1903 editionSee also editAnime influenced animation Japanophilia Weeb Anglo Japanese style Arabist Arab style Chinoiserie similar Chinese influence on Western art and design David B Gamble House Occidentalism for Eastern views of the West Orientalism Western romanticized depictions of Asian more often Near Eastern subject matter Turquerie Woodblock printing in Japan Woodcut Yamashiro Historic DistrictNotes edit From the French Japonisme French pronunciation ʒa pɔ nism References editReferences Japonism The Free Dictionary Retrieved 7 June 2013 Commodore Perry and Japan 1853 1854 Asia for Educators Columbia University afe easia columbia edu Retrieved 2020 02 02 Ono 2003 p 1 Davis Aaron Japanese Influence On Western Architecture Part 2 The Early Craftsmen Movement Nakamoto Forestry May 28 2019 accessed 2020 09 16 a b c Bickford Lawrence 1993 Ukiyo e Print History Impressions 17 1 JSTOR 42597774 Ono 2003 p 45 a b c d Irvine 2013 p 11 Earle 1999 p 330 Earle 1999 p 66 Irvine 2013 p 177 Earle 1999 p 252 Irvine 2013 pp 26 38 Earle 1999 p 10 Irvine 2013 p 36 Irvine 2013 p 38 a b Lambourne 2005 p 13 Gianfreda Sandra Introduction In Monet Gauguin Van Gogh Japanese Inspirations edited by Museum Folkwang Essen 14 Gottingen Folkwang Steidl 2014 a b c d Lambourne 2005 p 14 Wichmann Siegfried 2007 Japonisme the Japanese influence on Western art since 1858 London Thames and Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28163 5 OCLC 315522043 a b c Lambourne 2005 p 16 Nogami Takenori 2013 Japanese Porcelain in the Philippines Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 41 1 2 101 121 ISSN 0115 0243 JSTOR 43854721 a b Chisaburo Yamada Exchange of Influences in the Fine Arts between Japan and Europe Japonisme in Art An International Symposium 1980 14 Marie Antoinette and Japanese lacquer vogue com 20 January 2018 Retrieved 2021 04 24 A Study of the Methods and Operations of Japanning Practice Automotive Industries 42 669 11 Mar 1920 Cate et al 1975 p 1 Yvonne Thirion Le japonisme en France dans la seconde moitie du XIXe siecle a la faveur de la diffusion de l estampe japonaise 1961 Cahiers de l Association internationale des etudes francaises Volume 13 Numero 13 pp 117 130 DOI 10 3406 caief 1961 2193 a b c Breuer 2010 p 68 a b c Cate et al 1975 p 3 Cate et al 1975 p 4 Breuer 2010 p 41 a b c d Thomson 2014 p 70 Thomson 2014 p 71 a b Thomson 2014 p 72 Stevens ging als geen ander mee met het toentertijd sterk in mode zijnde Japonisme Thomas Bernadette Alfred Emile Leopold Stevens in Oxford Art Online Retrieved 27 December 2013 a b Marjan Sterckx Alfred Stevens Association of Historians of Nineteenth Century Art Retrieved 10 September 2020 The Psyche My Studio ca 1871 Princeton University Art Museum Retrieved 20 August 2020 a b c Cate et al 1975 p 12 a b Cate et al 1975 p 13 a b Breuer 2010 p 75 Breuer 2010 p 78 Ono 2003 p 5 Ono 2003 p 8 Ono 2003 p 6 a b Ono 2003 p 42 Maltarich Bill 2005 Samurai and supermen national socialist views of Japan Oxford P Lang ISBN 3 03910 303 2 OCLC 59359992 International Conference www jsme or jp Retrieved 2020 12 28 Slawson 1987 p 15 and note2 Conder quoted in Slawson 1987 p 15 Britain and Japan Biographical Portraits Global Oriental 2010 p 503 Japanese Garden Irish National Stud 19 May 2017 Retrieved 16 January 2019 Giverny Collection of japanese prints of Claude Monet Giverny hebergement hotels chambres d hotes gites restaurants informations artistes 2013 11 30 Retrieved 2020 05 26 Genevieve Aitken Marianne Delafond La collection d estampes Japonaises de Claude Monet La Bibliotheque des Arts 2003 ISBN 978 2884531092 The japanese prints The Claude Monet Foundation Retrieved 2020 05 26 Chong Alan 2009 Journeys east Isabella Stewart Gardner and Asia Murai Noriko Guth Christine Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Boston Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum ISBN 978 1 934772 75 1 OCLC 294884928 Art of Asia Museum of Fine Arts Boston 2010 10 15 Retrieved 2017 09 27 George Hendrik Breitner Girl in White Kimono Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Archived from the original on 9 September 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 SourcesBreuer Karin 2010 Japanesque The Japanese Print in the Era of Impressionism New York Prestel Publishing Cate Phillip Dennis Eidelberg Martin Johnston William R Needham Gerald Weisberg Gabriel P 1975 Japonisme Japanese Influence on French Art 1854 1910 Kent State University Press Earle Joe 1999 Splendors of Meiji treasures of imperial Japan masterpieces from the Khalili Collection St Petersburg Fla Broughton International Inc ISBN 1 874780 13 7 OCLC 42476594 Irvine Gregory ed 2013 Japonisme and the rise of the modern art movement the arts of the Meiji period the Khalili collection New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 23913 1 OCLC 853452453 Lambourne Lionel 2005 Japonisme cultural crossings between Japan and the West New York Phaidon Ono Ayako 2003 Japonisme in Britain Whistler Menpes Henry Hornel and nineteenth century Japan New York Routledge Curzon Slawson David A 1987 Secret Teachings in the Art of Japanese Gardens New York Tokyo Kodansha Thomson Belinda 2014 Japonisme in the Works of Van Gogh Gauguin Bernard and Anquetin In Museum Folkwang ed Monet Gauguin Van Gogh Japanese Inspirations Folkwang Steidl Further reading editCluzel Jean Sebastien editor Adamson John translator Japonisme and Architecture in France 1550 1930 Editions Faton 2022 ISBN 978 2 87844 307 3 Rumelin Christian and Ellis Tinios The Japanese and French Print in the Era of Impressionism 2013 Scheyer Ernst Far Eastern Art and French Impressionism The Art Quarterly 6 2 Spring 1943 116 143 Weisberg Gabriel P Reflecting on Japonisme The State of the Discipline in the Visual Arts Journal of Japonisme 1 1 2016 3 16 online Weisberg Gabriel P and Yvonne M L Weisberg Japonisme An Annotated Bibliography 1990 Wichmann Siegfried Japonisme The Japanese Influence on Western Art in the 19th and 20th Centuries Harmony Books 1981 Widar Halen Christopher Dresser 1990 Thesis Edo print art and its Western interpretations PDF External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japonisme Japonisme from the Metropolitan Museum of Art Timeline of Art History Orientalism Absence and Quick Firing Guns The Emergence of Japan as a Western Text Japonisme Exploration and Celebration Marc Maison s Gallery specialized in japonisme The Private Collection of Edgar Degas fully digitized text from The Metropolitan Museum of Art libraries contains essay Degas Japanese Prints and Japonisme pgs 247 260 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japonisme amp oldid 1207660071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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