login    password    artist  buyer  gallery  
Not a member? Register
absolutearts.com logo HOME REGISTER BUY ART SEARCH ART TRENDS COLLECT ART ART NEWS
 
 
Indepth Arts News:

"Shini-e: The Performance of Death in Japanese Kabuki Actor Prints"
2005-04-13 until 2005-07-24
Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts, Stanford University
Stanford, CA, USA United States of America

From April 13 through July 24, 2005, the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University presents a little-studied aspect of Japan’s “Floating World.” The exhibition "Shini-e: The Performance of Death in Japanese Kabuki Actor Prints" depicts a magical world of swashbucklers, transvestites, demons, witches, gods, monks, ghosts, and apparitions, as Floating World superstars make their final curtain call to the hereafter.

"Many have heard of Japan’s 'Floating World' peopled with dashing actors, bewitching courtesans, and enormous coteries of insatiable fans — in sum, the pleasure industry of early-modern Japan. The very term Floating World, ukiyo in Japanese, connotes life’s impermanence as well as the fleeting nature of life’s pleasures," said Melinda Takeuchi, professor of art history at Stanford. "But less studied is how that impermanence manifests itself concretely in the little-known genre called shini-e, or 'death pictures,' "

This exhibition of 27 works is drawn from a unique collection assembled by Stanford Prof. Emeritus Albert Dien, consisting of more than 350 shini-e woodblock prints from the 18th to early 20th centuries. Dien's collection vividly shows the diversity of Japanese ideas about the interplay between the worlds of the living and the dead. It pictures strategies by which the bereaved "managed" the personal disquietude and disruptions that attend death. It raises questions of individual versus social identity, of devices for perpetuation of actors’ lineages, and of the critical roles played by fans and other hangers-on upon whom the actors’ livelihood depended. Despite the seriousness of their mission, shini-e partake of an unexpected sense of play and the lively wit and irreverence synonymous with Floating World culture.

These commemorative prints were lucrative commercial productions as well. The death of a popular actor could generate more then 100 prints by rival publishers. So urgent was the economic need to scoop the competition that publishers did not hesitate, when facts were not immediately available, to make up the actor’s death date, a poignant farewell poem, his age, or other information.

The exhibition, which has been made possible through the generous support of the J. Sanford and Constance Miller Fund for Academic Initiatives, is the product of an undergraduate art history seminar at Stanford. Takeuchi and Stanford Visiting Lecturer Christine Guth, one of the foremost U.S. scholars on Japanese art, have been teaching a class with the same title as the exhibition. Under the direction of Takeuchi and Guth, the students shaped the material into four sections: Actors On Stage, The Actor Exits, Journey to the Afterworld, and Mourning and Remembrance. The students also researched the 27 prints selected for the exhibition, wrote the art labels, and created the explanatory text for the gallery walls.


Related Links:


YOUR FIRST STOP FOR ART ONLINE!
HELP MEDIA KIT SERVICES CONTACT


Discover over 150,000 works of contemporary art. Search by medium, subject matter, price and theme... research over 200,000 works by over 22,000 masters in the indepth art history section. Browse through new Art Blogs. Use our advanced artwork search interface.

Call for Artists, Premiere Portfolio sign-up for your Free Portfolio or create an Artist Portfolio today and sell your art at the marketplace for contemporary Art! Start a Gallery Site to exclusively showcase your gallery. Keep track of contemporary art with your free MYabsolutearts account.

 


Copyright 1995-2013. World Wide Arts Resources Corporation. All rights reserved