РефератыИностранный языкJaJapanese Art Essay Research Paper Japans Art

Japanese Art Essay Research Paper Japans Art

Japanese Art Essay, Research Paper


Japan?s Art, all thought sometimes over looked has evolved through many


different periods. Its simplest forms in the Archaic period and last on its more complex


period the Ego Period. Even though some skeptics believe that Japanese art can not


compare to the art of the Greeks or Romans. Japanese Art yet simple is refreshing and


has left Japan with wonderful shrines, paintings and traditions. The periods of Japanese


art are the Archaic, Ask, Heian, Kamakura, Askikaga and the Ego periods. Each


Period has taken Japan to a new level of art.


Starting with the Archaic period, Japan was a prehistoric society where its art


consisted of well crafted vessels, vases, and tools. Most vessels and vases were


constructed to look like they were surrounded in rope but in reality it was part of the


ceramic and clay pieces. They lived in pit dwellings with thatched roofs on bamboo


stilts. The Japanese did however build shrines in this period. These shrines were


consisted of many buildings and were concentrated around a central axis. The


symmetrical system was off set by a gate and a building were only the deity could dwell.


The most famous of these Shrines is the Ise Shrine. This shrine is 55 yards by 127 yards


and is completely fenced in. The Shrine is also made entirely out of wood! With the


building of shrines the Japanese moved into a new period, the Asuka period. The


religion of the people changed to Buddhism which also changed the focus of art. Bronze


sculptures of religious figures (Buddha) sprang up. This period was very short lived.


Still changing though Japan moves into the Heian Period. The Heian period


began at the beginning of the ninth century. The Japanese weren?t just practicing


Buddhism, they were practicing Esoteric Buddhism. Japan also stopped communication


with China, so the Japanese art wasn?t influenced by China. Paintings began to take over


the frames, the scenes were viewed from elevation and dull colors and flat surfaces


where used. This style was known as Yamato-e. Yamato-e was greatly used for the


illustration of stories. This style was cold and lifeless. But things began to look up


towards the end of the period. Towards the end of the period the dull large paintings


were replaced with pictures full of curves, grace and most importantly color.


The Japanese Art always changing and expan

ding mostly because of the


influence of the rulers. At the beginning of the Kamakura period a new ruler took over


Japan. In this period Artists emphasized on realism! The realism was so life like even


the simplest of details was expressed. Also a more advanced Yamato-e style was


developed with more color and softer lines. Also with realism came a type of formalized


religious art where the figures of Buddha became more uniformed. Yet, civil unrest lead


to another change of rulers.


And with this change of rulers came the Ashikaga period. Communication with


China was restored and once again China had a huge impact on Japanese Art. Yamato-e


which was developed while China and Japan were unable to communicate was


diminished and hardly used. But Japan did begin to develop the Tea Ceremony. The Tea


ceremony was taken from China but Japan adopted this ceremony and made it there own


and added much grace and poise to the event. One author said the purpose of a tea


ceremony “is to produce courtesy, politeness, modesty, moderation, calmness, peace of


body and soul, without pride or arrogance, fleeing from all ostentation, pomp, external


grandeur, and the magnificence.” Basically, a kind of get away from the real world and


place of calmness and tranquillity. In Japan No two tea houses are alike, they harbor the


same philosophies and the same tradition but each on is unique, one theme that is the


same throughout all teas houses is the representation of the love of nature. China may


have started the tea ceremony but Japan embraced it, added to it and made it their own,


and still today it is practiced.


And last but certainly not least the Ego Period the period which brings us from


the end of the Ashikaga period to the present. I find that Japanese art today is very flat


and very symmetrical and balanced. For someone who likes order and balance in life


would certainly go for this kind of art, very clear and crisp! Still today, the Shrines are


being re-built the Ice Shines has be re-built sixty times, its amazing to keep up with


something for that amount of time. But it still stands today. Just like Japanese Art,


maybe it didn?t make a huge impact on the world as a whole but it still survives today


Bibliography


Kleiner Fred and Richard Tansey, Gardner?s Art through the Ages 10th ed.


Harcourt Brace College Publishers. Orlando 1996

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