من وحي اليابان: رواد الفن الحديث / إيزابيل كان
Material type:
- 9786148035166
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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SAF Reference Library | Visual Arts | N4390-5098 100.715 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3489 |
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ND49-813 181.121 Rembrandt, Vermeer and the Dutch Golden Age : Masterpieces from The Leiden Collection and the Musee du Louvre | ND49-813 181.122 رامبرانت و فيرمير و العصر الذهبي الهولندي | N4390-5098 100.714 Japanese Connections : The birth of modern décor | N4390-5098 100.715 من وحي اليابان: رواد الفن الحديث / | N400-3990 139.256 Worlds in a Museum : Exploring Contemporary Museology | N400-3990 125.375 Louvre Abu Dhabi : A Journey Through an Architectural Masterpiece | N400-3990 125.376 اللوفر أبو ظبي: رحلة في أرجاء تحفة معمارية |
"This catalogue is published on the occasion of the exhibition ""Japanese Connections: The Birth of Modern Décor"" held at Louvre Abu Dhabi from Sept-Nov 2018.
Edited with text by Isabelle Cahn. Foreword by Mohamed Khalifa Al Mubarak, Jean-Luc Martinez, Manuel Rabaté, Laurence des Cars. Text by Brigitte Koyama-Richard, Élise Dubreuil, Fabienne Fravalo.
How the 19th-century fashion for Japonisme transformed European art and culture
Starting in the 1860s, a partiality for Japanese culture emerged in France, followed by England, which was to continue for almost 50 years. Giving rise to the fashion for “Japonisme,” it followed on from the taste for “chinoiserie” that was in vogue in the courts of Europe at the end of the 18th century, and that had fascinated several generations of Romantic artists during the first half of the 19th century. Most of the innovative artists collected these prints and were influenced by the themes specific to ukiyo-e, such as the seasons and climatic conditions. Hokusai, Hiroshige and Utamaro, woodblock print artists who were little thought of in Japan due to the “lightness” of their works, were considered masters in France. Their influence, combined with that of photography and scientific discoveries relating to matter, had a profound effect on how the world and academic certainties based on unchanging principles were viewed. The aesthetic revolution initiated by the Impressionists was pursued by artists such as Van Gogh and Gauguin, who both succumbed to the appeal of Japonisme and took up the formal simplification and bright colors of woodblock prints. The artistic exploration of such artists was to lead to the overturning of visual representation, of which the Nabis were direct heirs."
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