Cover image for Poetic imagination in Japanese art : selections from the collection of Mary and Cheney Cowles
Poetic imagination in Japanese art : selections from the collection of Mary and Cheney Cowles
Title:
Poetic imagination in Japanese art : selections from the collection of Mary and Cheney Cowles
Author:
Graybill, Maribeth, editor, contributor.
ISBN:
9781883124410
Physical Description:
283 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 32 cm
General Note:
Published in conjunction with the exhibition Poetic Imagination in Japanese Art: Selections from the Collection of Mary and Cheney Cowles, organized by the Portland Art Museum and held there October 13, 2018-January 13, 2019.
Contents:
Introduction : Finding the poetic in Japanese visual art / Maribeth Graybill -- A history of "poetic vision" in Japan / Joshua S. Mostow -- Calligraphy as visual poetry / Sadako Ohki -- The poet portrayed / Maribeth Graybill -- The lyricism of ink painting / Arata Shimao -- Japanese literati painting and its relationship to Chinese culture / Paul Berry -- Modern visions : early twentieth-century ink painters of Japan / Michiyo Morioka -- Appendix : Signatures and seals / Sangah Kim.
Abstract:
"Assembled over the last four decades and still growing, the Mary and Cheney Cowles collection of Japanese art is one of the finest in private hands in North America. What began for Cheney Cowles as an almost casual interest in collecting early Imari ware evolved, over time, into a passion for Japanese paintings and calligraphy. This volume focuses on what the authors found to be a compelling, recurring thread within that variety: a predilection for visual poetry. Occasionally, the text or image will illustrate or allude to a specific verse; more often, the relationship to poetry is more intuitive and rooted in a long-standing pictorial tradition. From the meditative serenity of Soei's White Herons and Reeds (early sixteenth century) to the heartwarming lyricism of Yosa Buson's Visiting a Friend in Plum Valley (1781) or the frenzied energy of Tomioka Tessai's Admiring the Moon from a Grotto (1916), the paintings illustrated in this volume suggest, rather than specify. Like the resonant verses in classical Chinese or Japanese, rich with nuanced layers of signification, the pictorial images invite the viewer's full attention and participation to complete their meaning"-- Provided by publisher.
Geographic Term:

Added Corporate Author:
Bibliographical References:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Field 805:
npmlib 11003287 ND2071 P64 yh
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