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Exhibit of the Gitter-Yelen Collection: viewing 400 years of Japanese art.


Enter the exquisite exhibition, An Enduring Vision: 17th to 20th Century Japanese Painting from the Gitter-Yelen Collection, in the Main Gallery of the Japan Society from 9 March to 20 June 2004, and you enter the serene realm of scholar-poets, ascetics, geishas, calligraphers
  • Thomas Ingmire
  • Rudolf Koch
  • Fernando Lembo di Pino
  • Reza Abbasi
  • Uragami Gyokudo
  • Ono no Michikaze
  • Arthur Baker
  • Daniel Reeve
  • Ingen Ryuki
  • Onoe Saishu
  • Shen Yinmo
  • Sun Guoting
  • Mir Ali Tabrizi
  • Simone Verovio
  • Wang Xianzhi
, Zen monks and eccentrics of all sorts. One of two major exhibits held each year at the Society, Enduring Vision showcases nearly 100 works from the internationally acclaimed collection of Americans Kurt Gitter, a doctor, and Alice Rae Yelen, a curator-educator. This particular cache of paintings is regarded as one of the choicest and most extensive private collections of Japanese art in the West.

Says Alexandra Munroe, Japan Society Gallery Director: "This exhibition is the first major survey of Japanese painting in more than two decades in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 and confirms the brilliant achievements and vitality of individual artists in pre-modern Japan. This exhibition is especially timely now that Japan Society is approaching its 100th anniversary, perfectly complementing our ongoing mission to illuminate Japan's rich artistic, historical and cultural legacy for international audiences in New York."

The show--the first time the Gitter-Yelen Collection has come to the City--trumpets the works of independent artists, those not part of the official painting schools that serviced court and shogun shogun (shō`gŭn'), title of the feudal military administrator who from the 12th cent. to the 19th cent. was, as the emperor's military deputy, the actual ruler of Japan.  elites. These are the paintings of experimental artists, whose works were commissioned by private patrons, many of them wealthy urban dwellers; some even painted for themselves. The focus is on individual schools and styles of Japanese painting, from the isolationist i·so·la·tion·ism  
n.
A national policy of abstaining from political or economic relations with other countries.



i
 Edo period (1615-1868) to the Meiji period (1868-1912) and beyond.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

A first-time visitor to the small, darkened gallery rooms is impressed by the variety and range of artistic styles on display, six altogether. There's the Nanga artists, who worshipped nature and derived their inspiration from the Chinese literati literati

Scholars in China and Japan whose poetry, calligraphy, and paintings were supposed primarily to reveal their cultivation and express their personal feelings rather than demonstrate professional skill.
 painters who idealized i·de·al·ize  
v. i·de·al·ized, i·de·al·iz·ing, i·de·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To regard as ideal.

2. To make or envision as ideal.

v.intr.
1.
 scholar-poets living in secluded bliss beside quiet streams and mountains. Pay careful note of Satake Kaikai's eighteenth-century fan-painting, Peach Blossom Landscape, with its calligraphic cal·lig·ra·phy  
n.
1.
a. The art of fine handwriting.

b. Works in fine handwriting considered as a group.

2. Handwriting.
 line that translates, "the banks are lined with flowering peach--embroidered ripples rise" and the artist's signature, "sake-loving Kaikai".

The Maruyama-Shijo school prized realism and painted from life. Don't miss Watanabe Nangaku's bold Cranes (1796) or my personal favorite, Takeuchi Seiho's spare landscape-screen, White Heron on Willow and Crows and Persimmon persimmon: see ebony.
persimmon

Either of two trees of the genus Diospyros in the ebony family, and their globular, edible fruits. The native American persimmon (D.
 (c. 1904), with an inky-black crow eating a persimmon in gorgeous, gilded gild 1  
tr.v. gild·ed or gilt , gild·ing, gilds
1. To cover with or as if with a thin layer of gold.

2. To give an often deceptively attractive or improved appearance to.

3.
 isolation. But the sections devoted to Zenga and the Eccentric painters are perhaps the most enchanting, if idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
, parts of the show. Zenga, literally Zen paintings, were the creations of Zen monks in the Edo period and were frequently used to educate people about Buddhism. Nakahara Nantenbo's Procession of Monks (1925), the monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 ink-brushed depiction of two long lines of Zen supplicants, exudes vitality and charm; Hakuin Ekaku's Mount Fuji and Eggplant (1700s), with its evocation of the mountain via a single brushstroke, is pure poetry.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

It's no surprise that the Zenga are in close proximity to the Eccentric paintings of three eighteenth-century Kyoto artists: Ito Jakuchu, Soga Shohaku and Nagasawa Rosetsu. The Eccentrics, or "individualists" as they also came to be known, defied classification, refusing to conform to the major painting traditions. We see here a refreshing humour, playfulness and Zen simplicity in Jakuchu's flowing outline of an elephant or his solitary, puffy crane.

The last area of the exhibit is devoted to the rather familiar Ukiyo-e genre, so-called "pictures of the floating world", that portray idealized geishas, prostitutes, Kabuki actors and the like in their respective realms, plying their respective trades. There's Kawamata Tsuneyuki's extraordinary painting, Male Prostitute Leaving a Brothel (1740s), extraordinary because the central figure is sporting high-heeled geta (wooden sandals) and a woman's hairstyle, and gives every appearance of being a courtesan cour·te·san  
n.
A woman prostitute, especially one whose clients are members of a royal court or men of high social standing.



[French courtisane, from Old French, from Old Italian cortigiana
 until you read the very helpful label.

But the exhibit is a sensuous excursion with surprises, large and small. Picking your way through the vast array of screens, scrolls, fans and other dreamscapes is rather like discovering buried treasure. Emerging from the dim, cavelike rooms, one feels better for having made the journey.
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Author:Castronovo, Val
Publication:UN Chronicle
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 1, 2004
Words:671
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