Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Date: Fri 27-Mar-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: CAROLL
Quick Words:
JFolk
Full Text:
The Art Of The People
w/4 cuts
GREENWICH, CONN. -- From April 18 through June 14, the Bruce Museum of Arts
and Science presents "Mingei: Japanese Folk Art from the Montgomery
Collection," featuring 175 objects from one of the world's premier collections
of Japanese folk art.
The exhibition includes paintings, textiles, sculpture, woodwork, ceramics,
lacquerware, metalwork, basketry, and paper objects spanning the Fifteenth
through Nineteenth Centuries. The objects were selected by guest curator
Robert J. Moes, an art historian specializing in Okinawan and Japanese
textiles.
The Bruce Museum's presentation marks the only Northeast showing of the
exhibition, which is being organized by Art Services International,
Alexandria, Va.
"Mingei: Japanese Folk Art from the Montgomery Collection" includes some never
previously exhibited textiles (quilt covers and festival robes) that
demonstrate the Japanese artists' dynamic use of color and pattern. An unusual
group of store signs, lacquer and paper lamps, ships' chests and kettle hooks
further illustrate the breadth of utilitarian objects designed to celebrate
form as well as function.
The exhibition includes a wide variety of vessels, from glazed stoneware sake
bottles and lacquer bowls to basins, casseroles, trays, and a charcoal caddy.
Also on view will be human and animal figures carved from wood, granite, and
clay and used in shrines or as toys. Together, all these objects represent the
high degree of skill and intuitive aesthetic sensitivity attained by Japanese
artisans.
The concept of "fine arts" did not exist in Japan, prior to its introduction
by Europeans in the 1870s. The work of painters, sculptors, and architects was
seen as essentially similar to that of potters, lacquerers, carpenters, basket
makers, swordsmiths, and other craftsmen. Yanagi Soetsu (1889-1961), an art
theorist, social critic, and philosopher, introduced the concept of folk art
to Japan around 1920. To describe it, he coined a new word, mingei (the art of
the people), by combining the Chinese/Japanese character min (people) with the
character gei (arts, accomplishments).
Yanagi was profoundly influenced by the writings of William Morris, founder of
the Arts and Crafts movement in England, who extolled the virtues of
craftsmanship and endorsed the well-designed and well-made object that
resulted when materials and techniques are thoroughly mastered. Yanagi
traveled throughout his homeland, as well as to Korea and Okinawa, collecting
superb examples of mingei. For Yanagi, such folk art objects reflected a sense
of locality, a directness evident in unornamented simplicity, a high level of
aesthetic sensitivity, and admiration of natural materials.
It has been said that Japanese folk art was produced by the common people for
their own use -- Yanagi referred to this anonymous artisan as the "unknown
craftsman." Yet nearly all these examples of mingei were created by
professional artisans with considerable expertise and experience. Although
they certainly did not regard themselves as artists prior to the Twentieth
Century, these craftsmen were highly specialized. Many served long
apprenticeships in order to master their complex skills.
Farmers and artisans were encouraged to produce hand crafts after their daily
chores and during their seasons off from agriculture in order to supplement
their meager incomes and thus contribute to their local economies. Some kiln
complexes and communities became renowned for their production of ceramic
wares or carved wooden objects.
And the consumers of mingei were likewise a diverse group, not all of whom
would ordinarily be called "common people." The official hierarchy imposed on
Japan by its feudal rulers during the Tokugawa era (1600-1867) resulted in
limited social mobility and made warriors, or samurai, the highest social
class next to the Imperial court nobility. Farmers, whose toil supported the
still largely agrarian economy, formed the next class, followed by artisans.
Merchants, nominally held in contempt by the samurai, constituted the lowest
class, except for the "untouchables" who were engaged in such "unclean" trades
as butchering and tanning.
Following the rise of Japan's merchant class in the late Sixteenth Century,
however, many merchants, especially sake brewers, amassed great wealth.
Consumers of mingei thus ranged from relatively poor farmers, at the lower
economic end, to rich merchants. Also, many members of the samurai class
acquired mingei, since only daimyo (feudal lords who ruled the provinces),
like the shogun (military dictator) or the Imperial court, could afford to
maintain their own artisans.
By late in the Tokugawa era, an expansive network of inter-regional trade
routes connected isolated towns with the bustling cities of Kyoto, Osaka, and
Edo. Large volumes of goods, including textiles, pottery, and books, were
traded and distributed throughout Japan. In the Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries, it became acceptable for warriors and commoners alike to travel for
business and pleasure. Tourists, eager to return home with souvenirs of local
foods, products, and crafts, added to the growing interest in what we now term
mingei.
The Montgomery collection, formed by Jeffrey Montgomery over the past 20
years, is one of the most comprehensive collections of Japanese art of daily
life, particularly significant for its high quality. "Mingei: Japanese Folk
Art from the Montgomery Collection" has already been to museums in Pittsburgh,
Pa.; Cincinnati, Ohio; Dallas, Tex.; Flint, Mich.; Palm Beach, Fla.; Fresno,
Calif.; and Fort Dodge, Iowa. A major scholarly catalogue, Mingei: Japanese
Folk Art, accompanies the exhibition. In addition to individual entries and
full-color illustrations of all objects in the exhibition, the publication
includes three essays by Robert Moes and one by Dr Amanda Stinchecum. A fifth
essay exploring Tokugawa society has been provided by Dr William B. Hauser,
professor of history at the University of Rochester. The book is published by
Art Services International.
The Bruce Museum is at 1 Museum Drive and is open Tuesdays through Saturdays,
10 am to 5 pm, and Sundays, 1 to 5 pm. Admission is $3.50.
For information, 203/869-0376.
