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美術館 > ENGLISH > EXHIBITION > Temporary Exhibitions > 2000-2009 > Modern Age in Japanese Sculpture From its Beginning through the 1960s

Modern Age in Japanese Sculpture From its Beginning through the 1960s

26 September to 4 November 2007

 

Hours: 9:30a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Entry is permitted thirty minutes before the galleries are closed.
Closed: Closed on Mondays (except the 8th October) and the 9th October

 

Admission:
Adults: 900 (700) Yen
Students (College or senior high): 700(500) Yen
Students (elementary or junior high school): 500 (300) Yen
(Concession for groups or advanced tickets)

Japan has produced three-dimensional representational art in several genres from ancient times, including Buddhist and Shinto images, architectural ornamentation, and dolls and display figures, which are all today subsumed in the general category of sculpture, but the concept of the realistic representation of the human form in the tradition of Western sculpture, as art rather than as a religious image, decor, or a toy, only entered Japan at the very end of the nineteenth century, several decades later than the introduction of Western painting. In the early years, ivory display objects, netsuke, and other craft products were produced for export, and sculptural works were sponsored to commemorate famous personages and historical events, but the first Japanese sculptors recognizable as individual artists in the modern sense were Morie Ogiwara(1879-1910) and Kotaro Takamura(1883-1956) both active in the first decades of the twentieth century.

 

The development of modern sculpture in Japan in the 1920s was by no means a smooth or simple process. The Japanese sculptors who studied under Antoine Bourdelle(1861-1929), disciple of Auguste Rodin(1840-1917), and Aristide Maillol(1861-1944) brought twentieth-century ideas back to Japan. At the same time, numerous changes were occurring in the traditional world of Wood sculpture, and after World War II, currents of abstract art also arrived and Influenced the work of Japanese sculptors.

 

This exhibition showcases the development of modern Japanese sculpture from the mid-nineteenth century through the 1960s, in the process examining the meaning of the concept of modernism in Japanese sculpture from various perspectives. To date there have been far fewer attempts to gain an overview of the history of modern sculpture in Japan than, for example, painting, and research on the subject is also unfortunately still insufficient. It is our hope that this exhibition and the accompanying catalogue will stimulate interest in reexamining modern Japanese sculpture and serve as a fortuitous opportunity to introduce the broader public to the abundant pleasures it has to offer.

 

We would like to thank all who have contributed to and supported both the exhibition and the catalogue.


●Composition of the exhibition

 
  1. Dawn of ‘Sculpture’
  2. Nation and Sculpture
  3. Formation of Academism
  4. Realization of Individual Expression
  5. Time of Diversity
  6. Sculpture by New Tendency
  7. Realism in Showa Era
  8. Development of Abstract Expression
    1. Scene of Beginning: Denial of Non-organic construction
    2. Transfromative Period: On the‘Surface’ of Sculpture
    3. Material and Space - since 1960s
 

Events

Gallery Talk
by a curator of the museum


PM 2:00, 29 September, 13 October, 3 November
Admission: ticket for exhibition is necessary

 

Children's Forum
◆"Sculture? What is it? Is it made of clay?"


for children between 7 years-old and 15 years-old

10:30-11:30, the 3rd November

Admission: limited to 20 children
 application by facsimile,
 with name, age, address and number of telephone or facsimile.
Time limit: the 2nd November

 

ticket for exhibition is necessary

 
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