Edo Period
Edo Period
Edo Period
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Teaching Program
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Edo
a r t i n j a p a n 1615 1868
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The exhibition
Edo: Art in Japan 1615 1868
is made possible by NTT
Exhibition dates:
15 November 1998 through
15 February 1999
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Edo
Art in Japan 1615 1868
Teaching Program
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acknowledgments
Moore.
this project.
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contents
Edo Style
Samurai
Work
10
15
19
Religion
Travel
28
23
Entertainment
Glossary
Chronology
33
39
40
Activities 42
Further Reading
Slide List
46
44
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half centuries.
figure 1
Museum
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figure 2
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wardrobe.
islands.
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because of their efforts to gain converts to Catholicism, but they permitted trade with the Dutch, who
were less interested in promoting religion. After 1720, when restrictions on
imported books were lifted, providing
they had no religiously subversive
content, a wide range of foreign books
and pictures filtered into the country.
These fueled the thirst for knowledge
and novelty, contributing significantly
to the rich cultural mix of the period.
In the 1820s, for instance, the introduction of an imported aniline dye
known as Prussian or Berlin blue contributed to a craze for prints that
made extensive use of this startlingly
deep and permanent color (see fig. 3).
With the spread of educational
opportunities and the diffusion of
inexpensive books, literacy soared
among men, women, and children of
all classes. Education, once limited to
warriors and courtiers, now became
available through temple schools as
well as private academies. Learning to
read and write required mastery of
Chinese characters as well as two syllabic systems. Although Chinese and
Japanese belong to different linguistic
systems, Japan had adopted Chinese
characters, supplementing them with
a complex phonetic syllabary. The
publication of easy-to-read novels,
figure 3
California
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figure 4
visual elements.
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figure 5
Dish with lotus leaf and
geometric pattern, late 1640s,
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edo style
The term Edo style may be confusing, since Edo can refer both to the
city known today as Tokyo and to the
10 Edo Style
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slide 1
Kosode with net pattern,
chrysanthemums, and characters
1668 1704
Tie-dyeing, stenciled imitation tie-dyeing,
and silk and metallic thread embroidery on
figured silk satin
158.5 x 139.6 (62 3/8 x 55)
Tokyo National Museum
Edo Style 11
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slide 2
Writing box with crane design in the
style of Ogata Krin
Eighteenth century
Lacquer
4.8 x 24.2 x 21.8 (17/8 x 9 1/2 x 8 1/2)
Tokyo National Museum
12 Edo Style
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slide 3
Dish with radish and waves design
c. 1680 1690s
Nabeshima ware
Porcelain with underglaze cobalt blue and
overglaze enamels
Diameter 20.4 (8 1/8)
Imaemon Museum of Ceramic Antiques, Saga
Edo Style 13
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slide 4
Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797 1861)
He Looks Fierce, but Hes Really
a Nice Person
from an untitled series of composite portraits
c. 1847 1848
Color woodblock print
Approx. 38 x 26 (15 x 10 1/4 )
Private Collection, Hygo
14 Edo Style
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samurai
figure 6
ence of Confucianism.
In the absence of actual warfare,
mount.
collectors.
Samurai 15
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slide 5
Miyamoto Musashi (1584 1645)
Hotei and Fighting Cocks
Seventeenth century
Hanging scroll; ink on paper
71 x 32.7 (28 x 12 7/8)
Fukuoka Art Museum
Important Art Object
16 Samurai
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slide 6
Helmet with rabbits ears
Sixteenth century
Wood and/or papier mch, iron, lacquer, and
silver foil
Height of helmet bowl 39.5 (15 1/2)
National Museum of Japanese History, Chiba
Samurai 17
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slide 7
Jinbaori with ships sails
Eighteenth century
Wool and other textiles
85 x 100 (33 1/2 x 39 3/8)
Maeda Ikutokukai Foundation, Tokyo
18 Samurai
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work
figure 7
individuals occupation
Museum, Osaka
The adoption of an elevated
vantage point provides a
panoramic view of a bustling
metropolis. Streets teeming
wealthy merchants.
decoration.
activities.
Work 19
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slide 8
Kusumi Morikage (c. 1620 1690)
Rice Cultivation in the Four Seasons
Detail from a pair of six-panel screens;
ink and light color on paper
Each 151 x 347 (59 1/2 x 136 5/8)
Kyoto National Museum
Important Cultural Property
The farmer at work was a timehonored theme in Japanese art, evocative of the seasonal beauties of the
countryside and of annual ritual
cycles. In the Edo period these rituals
took on political meaning as well,
because of the importance of agriculture in Tokugawa ideology. The idyllic
representation of farm life in the
visual arts, however, was in sharp
contrast to its harsh realities.
In this pair of screens a flowing
stream in the foreground and rolling
hills in the background link views of
farmers ploughing, planting, tending,
harvesting, and threshing rice. This
detail from the left corner of the lefthand screen shows a farmhouse
where the rice is being bundled while
a woman with a child on her back
looks on. The lightness of touch
especially the deft handling of the
pale ink washes and delicate bands of
gold mist is characteristic of the
style of Kusumi Morikage, an artist
active in the northern domain of the
Maeda, one of the wealthiest daimyo
How were folding screens used?
Screens, usually designed in pairs of two, four, or six panels each,
were a favorite format for the Japanese painter. They had both
practical and decorative functions, providing privacy at night and
preventing drafts in the winter, while adding visual interest to a
room. When the shogun held an audience, his importance was
underscored by placing a painted screen behind him. When not in
use, screens could be easily folded and put away.
20 Work
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slide 9
Kosode with design of Rice
Cultivation in the Four Seasons
Early nineteenth century
Paste-resist dye on figured silk satin
167.2 x 124 (65 7/8 x 48 7/8)
Tokyo National Museum
Work 21
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slide 10
Firemans jacket with design of
waves and dragon
Paste-resist dye on plain-weave cotton, quilted
81.9 x 94 (32 1/4 x 37)
Tokyo National Museum
22 Work
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religion
figure 8
Soga Shhaku (1730 1781),
Religion 23
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sculpture.
24 Religion
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slide 11
Gion Festival
Seventeenth century
Detail from a pair of six-panel screens;
ink, color, and gold on paper
visit.
Religion 25
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slide 12
Hakuin Ekaku (1685 1768)
Daruma (Bodhidharma)
Hanging scroll; ink on paper
134.2 x 91.8 (52 7/8 x 36 1/8)
Seikenji, Shizuoka
26 Religion
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slide 13
(1760 1849)
this scene.
Religion 27
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travel
28 Travel
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perspective.
figure 9
Maruyama kyo (1733 1795),
Both Banks of the Yodo River,
1765, detail from a handscroll;
ink and color on silk, 40.2 x
Travel 29
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slide 14
Mount Yoshino
screen paintings.
to Krin.
30 Travel
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slide 15
Ogata Kenzan (1663 1743)
The Eight-Fold Bridge
Hanging scroll; ink and light color on paper
35.6 x 40.6 (14 x 16)
Private Collection, Kyoto
Important Cultural Property
Travel 31
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slide 16
32 Travel
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entertainment
period Japan. Every city had an officially licensed pleasure quarter where
men could socialize and be amused by
talented courtesans. Edo and Osaka
boasted kabuki theaters where the
nations favorite actors performed.
Open areas along the riverbanks or
surrounding temples and shrines were
packed with shops, sideshows, and
food stalls that drew people from even
the most humble backgrounds.
Temporary arenas for sumo wrestling
tournaments, a wildly popular professional sport, were set up several times
a year in locations throughout the
country (see fig. 10). Even the residents
of the smallest towns and villages
could count on periodic visits from
itinerant theater and dance troupes
and enjoy the ritual dance dramas
performed at temples and shrines.
Affluent merchants played a leading role in creating and supporting the
vibrant urban culture that developed
in the city. Denied a say in running the
country, despite their role in its economy, merchants threw their energies
into the practice and patronage of cultural pursuits traditionally monopolized by the elite. They became
devotees of the theater, pleasure quar-
figure 10
National Museum
Entertainment 33
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beautiful courtesan.
34 Entertainment
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slide 17
N mask: Asakura j
(old man)
Seventeenth century
Carved wood, gesso, and pigment
19.7 x 16.2 (7 3/4 x 6 3/8)
Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of Art
Entertainment 35
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slide 18
Kabuki costume with target
and arrows
Nineteenth century
Silk and metallic thread embroidered
appliqus with ink on silk satin
110 x 131 (43 1/4 x 51 5/8)
Tokyo National Museum
36 Entertainment
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slide 19
Hikone Screen
c. 1620s 1640s
Detail from one of six panels (originally
connected in screen format); ink, color,
and gold on paper
Assembled 94.6 x 274.8 (37 1/4 x 108 1/8)
Hikone Castle Museum, Shiga
National Treasure
Entertainment 37
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slide 20
Kitagawa Utamaro (c. 1754 1806)
The Fancy-Free Type
from Ten Types of Female Physiognomy
c. 1792 1793
Color woodblock print with mica
37.8 x 24.3 (14 7/8 x 9 1/2)
Tokyo National Museum
Important Cultural Property
38 Entertainment
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glossary
Tokugawa rulers
Buddhism
shogun title given supreme military
leader during the Edo period
Tokugawa family name of the ruling
dynasty during the Edo period
kimono
kabuki actors
sure quarter
realm
Glossary 39
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chronology
1600
1603
1612
1615
1624
1629
1635
1639
1657
1663
1673
1688 1704
1707
1718
1765
1772
1788
1794 1795
1830s
1853
1860s
1867
1868
40 Chronology
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activities
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activities
Professions Beginner/Intermediate,
Beginner, Intermediate, or
Advanced learners.
Curriculum connections
are suggested for Art,
Social Studies.
http://www.us-japan.org/edomatsu
Actors (yakusha)
Blacksmiths (kaji)
Bucketmakers (okeya)
Carpenters (daiku)
Farmers (nmin)
Firemen (hikeshi)
Fishermen (gyomin)
Gunsmiths (teppkaji)
Hotelkeepers (yadoya)
Matmakers (tatamiya)
Potters (yk)
Restauranteurs (ryriya)
Silversmiths (ginzaikuya)
(slides 8, 14) .
42 Activities
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Vocabulary Beginner/Intermediate,
Souvenirs Intermediate,
Language Arts
Language Arts
Performing Arts
when, and where using symbolic language. For example, clouds connote
summer, and frogs connote late
spring. Ask students to create a haiku
poem, employing symbols to express
their ideas.
Activities 43
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further reading
Books
York, 1996.
cultures. Have students write or discuss the results. Then ask students to
York, 1996.
1994.
Tsunoda, Ryusaku, et al. Sources of
Japanese Tradition. New York, 1964.
Varley, H. Paul. Japanese Culture.
Honolulu, 1984.
Web sites
http://www.us-japan.org/edomatsu
http://www.askasia.org
44 Further Reading
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32
slide list
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slide list
slide 1
Kosode with net pattern,
chrysanthemums, and characters
slide 6
Helmet with rabbits ears
1668 1704
silver foil
silk satin
Sixteenth century
slide 7
Jinbaori with ships sails
slide 2
Writing box with crane design in the
style of Ogata Krin
Eighteenth century
Eighteenth century
Lacquer
4.8 x 24.2 x 21.8 (17/8 x 9 1/2 x 8 1/2)
Tokyo National Museum
slide 3
Dish with radish and waves design
c. 1680 1690s
Nabeshima ware
overglaze enamels
Diameter 20.4 (8 1/8)
Imaemon Museum of Ceramic Antiques, Saga
slide 4
Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797 1861)
He Looks Fierce, but Hes Really
a Nice Person
from an untitled series of composite portraits
c. 1847 1848
Color woodblock print
slide 9
Kosode with design of Rice Cultivation
in the Four Seasons
Early nineteenth century
Paste-resist dye on figured silk satin
167.2 x 124 (65 7/8 x 48 7/8)
Tokyo National Museum
slide 10
Firemans jacket with design of waves
and dragon
slide 5
Miyamoto Musashi (1584 1645)
Hotei and Fighting Cocks
46 Slide List
slide 8
Kusumi Morikage (c. 1620 1690)
Rice Cultivation in the Four Seasons
slide 11
Gion Festival
Seventeenth century
Seventeenth century
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slide 12
Hakuin Ekaku (1685 1768)
Daruma (Bodhidharma)
slide 17
N mask: Asakura j
(old man)
Seikenji, Shizuoka
slide 13
Attributed to Katsushika Hokusai
(1760 1849)
Buddhist Priest Warding off a Demon
slide 18
Kabuki costume with target
and arrows
c. 1845
Sjiji, Tokyo
slide 14
Watanabe Shik (1683 1755)
Mount Yoshino
slide 19
Hikone Screen
Seventeenth century
Nineteenth century
c. 1620s 1640s
National Treasure
slide 15
Ogata Kenzan (1663 1743)
The Eight-Fold Bridge
slide 20
Kitagawa Utamaro (c. 1754 1806)
The Fancy-Free Type
c. 1792 1793
slide 16
Katsushika Hokusai (1760 1849)
Sudden Wind on a Clear Day
Slide List 47
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Education Division
National Gallery of Art
Washington, D.C. 20565
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