Takashina Shūji · Treyvaud Matt
Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture · 2021
The Japanese Art in Perspective
East-West Encounters
2021
Treyvaud Matt
Hardcover
9784866581804
191
How do Japanese and Western aesthetics differ? In this comparative cultural study, Takashina Shūji, a leading scholar of Western art history and insightful commentator on Japanese art, compares the two artistic traditions to reveal the distinctive characteristics of the Japanese sense of beauty.
The first section, Methods of Japanese Art, uses examples and cross-cultural comparisons to elucidate the techniques by which Japanese artists cultivated their unique approach. These include roving rather than fixed perspective, the “aesthetic of negation”—excising the unnecessary to emphasize what remains—and the “trailing bough” motif, which evokes a world beyond the work’s borders and influenced Western artists such as Monet.
In the second section, East-West Encounters, Takashina examines the history of cultural interaction between Japan and the West from the early modern period on and its influence on the art of both. The third section, Passing Beauty, Returning Memory, contains essays on Japanese culture more broadly, including its preference for recurring forms over fixed monuments and its tradition of combining multiple seasons in a single image.
Japanese Art in Perspective is a guide not only to the art of Japan but to the essence of its spiritual culture.
Preface to the English Edition
1. The Character of Japanese Aesthetics
2. Object and Form
3. Forms of Seeing, East and West
4. The “Trailing Bough” Motif
7. East and West in Meiji Painting
8. The Avant-Garde in Japanese Art
9. Japanese Academism
10. Some Problems of Japonisme
11. The Aesthetics of Transition: The Four Seasons and the Japanese Sense of Beauty
12. “The Color of the Flowers”: Symphonies of Image and Word
Afterword to the Expanded Edition