#artsofjapan
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brooklynmuseum · 5 years ago
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We wish you a happy Bunka no hi (Japanese Culture Day), a national holiday in Japan and a great day in any country to celebrate and explore the rich artistic heritage of Japan. 
Posted by Joan Cummins Katsushika Hokusai (Japanese, 1760-1849). Fuji from the Platform of Sasayedo, 19th century. Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Frederic B. Pratt, 42.77
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shar1129 · 5 years ago
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#japaneseart #artsofjapan #metmuseum (at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9exlRdhyT3/?igshid=cl05hnfsgqth
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brooklynmuseum · 5 years ago
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Today marks the official reopening of our Arts of Asia galleries, featuring both ancient and contemporary Chinese and Japanese art works. Continue your exploration into Asian artistic excellence with One: Xu Bing, a spotlight exhibition highlighting Square Word Calligraphy: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Walt Whitman, by one of China’s most important living artists. Created specifically for the Museum, the work celebrates Xu Bing's close relationship with Brooklyn and pays homage to the famous Brooklyn poet Walt Whitman.⁠ 
Head of a Guardian. Japan, Kamakura period (1185–1333), 13th century. Hinoki cypress wood with lacquer on cloth, pigment, rock crystal, metal. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Alastair B. Martin, the Guennol Collection, 86.21.  ⇨  Xu Bing (Chinese, born 1955). Square Word Calligraphy: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Walt Whitman, 2018. Ink on paper. Gift of Xu Bing to the Brooklyn Museum in honor of his father, 2018.24a–b. (Photo: Courtesy of the artist) ⇨ Wine Jar with Fish and Aquatic Plants, 14th century. Porcelain with underglaze cobalt blue decoration. The William E. Hutchins Collection, Bequest of Augustus S. Hutchins, 52.87.1. Creative Commons-BY 
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brooklynmuseum · 5 years ago
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Following a multiyear renovation and the reopening of the Arts of Korea collection, we're pleased to unveil two new galleries highlighting its important and diverse collection of works from China and Japan. Opening on October 25, the Arts of China and Arts of Japan galleries will feature masterworks as well as rarely seen or never-before-shown treasures from the Brooklyn Museum’s Asian Art collection. Both galleries will also highlight new acquisitions and contemporary works, connecting centuries of artistic practice through common themes and mediums. 
Head of a Guardian, 13th century. Hinoki wood with lacquer on cloth, pigment, rock crystal, metal. Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Alastair B. Martin, the Guennol Collection, 86.21. Creative Commons-BY ⁠⇨ Wine Jar with Fish and Aquatic Plants, 14th century. Porcelain with underglaze cobalt blue decoration. Brooklyn Museum, The William E. Hutchins Collection, Bequest of Augustus S. Hutchins, 52.87.1. Creative Commons-BY  ⁠
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brooklynmuseum · 6 years ago
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Upcoming Shows Through January 2020
We’re pleased to announce our advance schedule of exhibitions through January 2020, including a retrospective featuring the futurist fashion of Pierre Cardin; a solo presentation of work by internationally recognized artist JR; and the reinstallation of the Museum's Arts of Japan and China collections. In addition, and in collaboration with the Château de Malmaiso, France, in January 2020 the iconic Kehinde Wiley painting from the Brooklyn Museum's collection—Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps (2005)—will be on view in dialogue with its early nineteenth-century source painting, Jacques-Louis David's Napoleon Crossing the Alps (1800-1801).
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Pierre Cardin: Future Fashion 
July 20, 2019-January 5, 2020 Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing and Iris and B. Gerald Cantory Gallery, 5th Floor
The retrospective exhibition Pierre Cardin: Future Fashion traces the legendary career of one of the fashion world's most innovative designers, one whose futuristic designs and trailblazing efforts to democratize high fashion for the masses pushed the boundaries of the industry for more than seven decades. Featuring over 170 objects that date from the 1950s to the present, the exhibition includes haute couture and ready-to-wear garments, accessories, photographs, film, and other materials drawn primarily from the Pierre Cardin archive. Highlights range across rare designs in luxury fabrics from the 1950s; a large grouping from the landmark 1964 "Cosmocorps" collection; creations that incorporate vinyls, plastics, and the self-named "Cardine" synthetic fabric; signature unisex ensembles featuring full knit bodysuits with layered skirts, vests, bibs, and jewelry; iconic broad-shouldered jackets from the 1980s based on Japanese origami, Chinese architecture, and American football uniforms; "illuminated" jumpsuits and dresses; and an extensive overview of Cardin's recently designed couture menswear and eveningwear. The exhibition reveals how the designer's bold, futuristic aesthetic had a pervasive influence not only on fashion, but on other forms of design that extended beyond clothing to furniture, industrial design, and more.
Pierre Cardin: Future Fashion is curated and designed by Matthew Yokobosky, Senior Curator of Fashion and Material Culture, Brooklyn Museum. Leadership support for this exhibition is provided by Chargeurs.
Terry O'Neill (British, born 1938). Raquel Welch in a Pierre Cardin outfit featuring a miniskirt and necklace in blue vinyl, worn with a Plexiglas visor, 1970. Image courtesy of Iconic Images. © Terry O'Neill / Iconic Images
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JR: Chronicles October 4, 2019-May 3, 2020 Great Hall, 1st Floor
We’re pleased to present JR: Chronicles, the French artist's largest solo museum exhibition to date. The presentation covers nearly 20,000 square feet of our Great Hall and traces JR's artistic evolution since 2001, focusing on his commitment to community and civic discourse through the use of large-scale media such as news and advertising as well as architectural interventions. Working at the intersections of photography, social practice, and street art, JR's participatory projects have fostered collaborations and conversations around the globe. The exhibition centers on The Chronicles of New York City, a new monumental mural incorporating the portraits and stories of over one thousand New Yorkers. The immersive installation also features JR's most well-known works across photography, installation, film, and video from the past fifteen years, including his first major collaborative project, Portrait of a Generation (2004-6); Face 2 Face (2007), which features giant portrait diptychs of Israelis and Palestinians, face to face, in eight Palestinian and Israeli cities; Women Are Heroes (2008-9), featuring images of the eyes of women gazing back at their communities in numerous countries, including Brazil, India, and Kenya; the global participatory art project Inside Out (2011-ongoing); and The Gun Chronicles: A Story of America (2018), a video mural that gives a face to the full and complex spectrum of views on guns in the United States.
JR: Chronicles is curated by Sharon Matt Atkins, Director of Curatorial Affairs, and Drew Sawyer, Phillip Leonian and Edith Rosenbaum Leonian Curator, Photography, Brooklyn Museum.
JR (French, born 1983). The Chronicles of New York City (detail), 2018-19. Dimensions variable. © JR-ART.NET
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Arts of China Opens October 25, 2019 Arts of Asia and the Middle East, 2nd Floor
Our comprehensive collection of Chinese art spans more than five thousand years of Chinese artistic accomplishment, and boasts a diversity of art forms including jades, bronzes, lacquer, sculpture, painting, and calligraphy. This fall, we open our newly reinstalled galleries for our renowned Arts of China collection, featuring recent acquisitions, new commissions, and rarely seen historical treasures. Our large collection of cloisonné enamels, many from the Chinese imperial collection, are featured, along with masterpieces of bronze such as a Shang dynasty ritual vessel (gong) and a Han dynasty goose. Also on view are a selection of ceramics, including our world-famous Yuan dynasty Wine Jar with Fish and Aquatic Plants, widely acknowledged to be one of the finest blue-and-white porcelains in the Western hemisphere. Since 2014, we have worked to expand our holdings of contemporary painting and sculpture by Chinese artists, culminating in the acquisition of over fifty works from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, including new commissions that spark dialogue with objects from our historical collection. Highlights include experimental ink painting by Sun Xun, Zheng Chongbin, Tai Xiangzhou, Zhang Jian-Jun, Bingyi, Peng Wei, and others.
Arts of China is curated by Susan L. Beningson, Assistant Curator, Asian Art, Brooklyn Museum.
Wine Jar with Fish and Aquatic Plants. China. Yuan dynasty, 1279-1368. Porcelain with underglaze cobalt blue decoration, 111 5/16 x 13 3/4 in. (30.3 x 34.9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, The William E. Hutchins Collection, Bequest of Augustus S. Hutchins, 52.87.1. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
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Arts of Japan Opens October 25, 2019  Arts of Asia and the Middle East, 2nd Floor
This fall, we unveil a new gallery for our Arts of Japan collection following a multiyear renovation. In this inaugural installation, seventy objects from our collection illustrate the sophistication of Japanese art-making technologies and explore the dialogue between tradition and innovation in Japan. Featuring masterworks of Buddhist sculpture, vivid Ukiyo-e prints, exquisite screen paintings, and cutting-edge contemporary ceramics, the gallery highlights two thousand years of artistic achievement. In acknowledgement of the cultural diversity within the region, the installation also includes highlights from our important collection of artifacts from the Ainu people of northern Japan, material that is rarely shown in an art museum setting
Arts of Japan is curated by Joan Cummins, Lisa and Bernard Selz Senior Curator, Asian Art, Brooklyn Museum.
Head of Guardian. Japan. Kamakura period (1185-1333), 13th century. Hinoki wood with polychrome, inlaid rock crystal eyes, filigree metal crown, 22 1/16 x 10 1/4 x 13 15/16 in. (56 x 26 x 35.4 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Alastair B. Martin, the Guennol Collection, 86.21. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
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One: Xu Bing October 25, 2019-April 26, 2020  Focus Gallery, 2nd Floor
Focusing on a major new gift to our world-renowned collection of Chinese art, One: Xu Bing highlights the painting Square Word Calligraphy: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Walt Whitman (2018). Created specifically for the Brooklyn Museum in consultation with curator Susan L. Beningson, this painting by one of China's most important living artists celebrates Xu Bing's close relationship with Brooklyn, where he lived in the 1990s and still has a studio today. Square Word Calligraphy: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Walt Whitman pays homage to Walt Whitman, the famous American poet, who served as an early librarian at the Brooklyn Apprentices' Library Association (our predecessor). His now-iconic poem "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry" is part of his collection Leaves of Grass and celebrates the idea that all of us are united in our shared human experience. 2019 marks Whitman's 200th birthday, and this exhibition includes material from our Archives to celebrate his relationship to the Museum.  
Xu Bing (b. 1955) developed Square Word Calligraphy as a new way of rendering the English language after he came to New York in the early 1990s. The hybrid calligraphy incorporates English words in rectangular arrangements that resemble Chinese characters. This interplay between form and language reflects Xu Bing's experience in New York, where he lived between two cultures.
One: Xu Bing is curated by Susan L. Beningson, Assistant Curator, Asian Art, Brooklyn Museum.
Xu Bing (Chinese, born 1955). Square Word Calligraphy: Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, Walt Whitman, 2018. Ink on paper, 89 3/8 x 48 13/16 in. (227 x 124 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of Xu Bing to the Brooklyn Museum in honor of his father, 2018.24a-b. (Photo: Courtesy of the artist)
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Jacques-Louis David Meets Kehinde Wiley January 24-May 10, 2020  Morris A. and Meyer Schapiro Wing, 4th Floor
Jacques-Louis David Meets Kehinde Wiley brings an iconic painting from our collection—Kehinde Wiley's Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps (2005)—into dialogue with its early nineteenth-century source painting, Jacques-Louis David's Napoleon Crossing the Alps (1800-1801). The two paintings, displayed together for the very first time, are on view in consecutive exhibitions at the Château de Malmaison from October 9, 2019 to January 6, 2020, and at the Brooklyn Museum from January 24 to May 10, 2020. The exhibition questions how ideas of race, masculinity, representation, power, heroics, and agency play out within the realm of portraiture. The Brooklyn presentation marks the first display of David's painting in New York, and Wiley helps highlight this momentous occasion by consulting on the exhibition design. Video also accompanies the project, incorporating Wiley's perspectives on how the Western canon, French portrait tradition, and legacies of colonialism influence his own practice. The exhibition represents an intimate conversation between two key artists of the nineteenth and twenty-first centuries and illuminates how images construct history, convey notions of power and leadership, and monumentalize figures in the form of aggrandizing icons.
The exhibition is organized by the Brooklyn Museum and Musée national des châteaux de Malmaison and Bois-Préau. The Brooklyn presentation is curated by Lisa Small, Senior Curator, European Art, and Eugenie Tsai, John and Barbara Vogelstein Senior Curator, Contemporary Art, Brooklyn Museum.
Kehinde Wiley (American, born 1977). Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps, 2005. Oil on canvas, 108 x 108 in. (274.3 x 274.3 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Partial gift of Suzi and Andrew Booke Cohen in memory of Ilene R. Booke and in honor of Arnold L. Lehman, Mary Smith Dorward Fund, and William K. Jacobs, Jr. Fund, 2015.53. © Kehinde Wiley. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
Jacques-Louis David (French, 1748-1825). Napoleon Crossing the Alps (Bonaparte franchissant le Grand-Saint-Bernard), 1801. Oil on canvas, 102 1/3 x 87 in. (261 x 221 cm). Collection of Château de Malmaison. (Photo: Courtesy RMN-GP)
Top image: Pierre Cardin two-tone jersey dresses, with vinyl waders, 1969. (Photo:Yoshi Takata. © Pierre Pelegry)
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brooklynmuseum · 5 years ago
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Educators and school administrators are invited to celebrate the reopening of the Arts of Asia galleries at our Educators’ Open House. Explore the newly reinstalled galleries from our extensive Arts of China and Arts of Japan collections, and learn more about these rich artistic traditions through curator walkthroughs, gallery discussions, and artist-led brush painting workshops. Enjoy food, drinks, and fun conversation, and learn about opportunities for your school community to connect with the Museum through class visits, partnerships, and professional development workshops. 
This event is free, but registration is required. RSVP today! 
Posted by Michael Reback
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brooklynmuseum · 5 years ago
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Among the many narratives told in our newly reinstalled #ArtsofJapan galleries is the story of advancements and continuity throughout the country’s ten-thousand-year history of ceramic-making. This dramatic pot is likely the oldest object in the gallery, but by the time it was created in approximately 3000-2000 b.c.e., artisans in Japan had been making fired-clay vessels for at least seven thousand years. By the Middle Jōmon period, potters had excellent control over their materials and could create vessels that were beautiful as well as functional. Now you can see ancient works like this along side contemporary ceramics that represent the cutting edge of ceramic achievement in Japan.
Pot with Handles. Japan, Middle Jōmon period, 3000–2000 b.c.e. Earthenware. Lent by The Randall and Barbara Smith Foundation, L1994.6.2.
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