Difference between revisions of "Japan"

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==Avant-garde==
 
==Avant-garde==
* [[MAVO]]
+
* [[Futurist Art Association]] (1920-22)
 +
* [[MAVO]] (1923-25)
 
* [[Tomoyoshi Murayama]] (村山知義)
 
* [[Tomoyoshi Murayama]] (村山知義)
 +
* [[Shuichiro Kinoshita]]
 +
* [[Osamu Shibuya]]
 +
* [[Iwane Sumiya]]
 
* [[Tatsuo Okada]] (岡田竜夫)
 
* [[Tatsuo Okada]] (岡田竜夫)
 +
* [[Kimimaro Yabashi]]
 +
* [[Tatsuo Toda]]
 +
* [[Masao Kato]]
 
* [[Ogata Kamenosuke]] (尾形亀之助) [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/尾形亀之助]
 
* [[Ogata Kamenosuke]] (尾形亀之助) [http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/尾形亀之助]
 
* [[Yanase Masamu]] (柳瀬正夢) [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanase_Masamu]
 
* [[Yanase Masamu]] (柳瀬正夢) [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yanase_Masamu]
 
* [[Shūzō Ōura]] (大浦周造)
 
* [[Shūzō Ōura]] (大浦周造)
 
* [[Michinao Takamizawa]]  
 
* [[Michinao Takamizawa]]  
* [[Yamada Shinkichi]] (山田伸吉)
+
* [[Yamada Shinkichi]] (山田伸吉), dadaist.
 
* [[NNK]] group: Tatsuo Okada, Michinao Takamizawa and Tatsuo Toda.
 
* [[NNK]] group: Tatsuo Okada, Michinao Takamizawa and Tatsuo Toda.
 +
* [[Hagiwara Kyōjirō]], writer.
 +
* [[Hayashi Fumiko]], writer.
 +
* [[Jun Tsuji]] (辻潤), dadaist. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jun_Tsuji]
 +
* [[Yoshiyuki Eisuke]] (吉行 エイスケ), dadaist. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yoshiyuki_Eisuke]
  
 
===Publications===
 
===Publications===
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* "Mavo Manifesto", in the pamphlet for the first Mavo exhibition at Denpōin Temple in Asakusa, 1923; repr. in ''Nihon no Dada 1920-1970'', ed. Yoshio Shirakawa, Tokyo: Hakuba Shobō and Kazenobara, 1988, pp 35-36.
 
* "Mavo Manifesto", in the pamphlet for the first Mavo exhibition at Denpōin Temple in Asakusa, 1923; repr. in ''Nihon no Dada 1920-1970'', ed. Yoshio Shirakawa, Tokyo: Hakuba Shobō and Kazenobara, 1988, pp 35-36.
 
* Tomoyoshi Murayama, ''Ichimei ishikiteki kōsei shugi e no dōtei'' [現在の藝術と未來の藝術 一名、意識的構成主義への道程], 1924.
 
* Tomoyoshi Murayama, ''Ichimei ishikiteki kōsei shugi e no dōtei'' [現在の藝術と未來の藝術 一名、意識的構成主義への道程], 1924.
* ''Mavo'', July 1924-August 1925, 7 issues. Published by Chōryūsha and edited by Tatsuo Okada and Tomoyoshi Murayama. Magazine inspired by Dada and by the irrationality in Zen. Changed name in October 1928 to ''Keisei gahō'' [Formative Pictorial] and became the private publication of Tatsuo Okada. Contributors included [[Toda Tatsuo]] and [[Yanase Masamu]]. [http://books.google.com/books?id=6ZjqDb-zwVQC&pg=PA208]
+
* ''Mavo'', July 1924-August 1925, 7 issues. Published by Chōryūsha and edited by Tatsuo Okada and Tomoyoshi Murayama. Magazine inspired by Dada and by the irrationality in Zen. Changed name in October 1928 to ''Keisei gahō'' [Formative Pictorial] and became the private publication of Tatsuo Okada. Contributors included [[Tatsuo Toda]] and [[Masamu Yanase]]. [http://books.google.com/books?id=6ZjqDb-zwVQC&pg=PA208]
  
 
; On art and the machine
 
; On art and the machine
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; Artists' books
 
; Artists' books
* Kyōjirō Hagiwara, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10690 Shikei senkoku]'' [Death Sentence], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 161+6 pp. Illustrated by Mavo. Anthology of visual poetry. [http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/shikei-senkoku-death-sentence-438587]
+
* Hagiwara Kyōjirō, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10690 Shikei senkoku]'' [Death Sentence], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 161+6 pp. Illustrated by Mavo. Anthology of visual poetry. [http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/shikei-senkoku-death-sentence-438587]
 
* Ernst Toller, ''Tsubame no sho'' [The Swallow Book], trans. Tomoyoshi Murayama, Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 106 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. [http://rarebook.com/index.php/component/content/article/41/516]
 
* Ernst Toller, ''Tsubame no sho'' [The Swallow Book], trans. Tomoyoshi Murayama, Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 106 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. [http://rarebook.com/index.php/component/content/article/41/516]
 
* Hideo Saito, ''Aozameta douteikyo'' [The Pale-Faced Virgin's Mad Thoughts], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1926, 120 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. Anthology of visual poetry. [http://rarebook.com/index.php/component/content/article/41/729] [http://www.spencerart.ku.edu/collection/recent/tatsuo.shtml]
 
* Hideo Saito, ''Aozameta douteikyo'' [The Pale-Faced Virgin's Mad Thoughts], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1926, 120 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. Anthology of visual poetry. [http://rarebook.com/index.php/component/content/article/41/729] [http://www.spencerart.ku.edu/collection/recent/tatsuo.shtml]
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* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1784 "Mavo’s Conscious Constructivism: Art, Individualism, and Daily Life in Interwar Japan"], ''Art Journal'' 55:3 (Autumn 1996), pp 64-73.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1784 "Mavo’s Conscious Constructivism: Art, Individualism, and Daily Life in Interwar Japan"], ''Art Journal'' 55:3 (Autumn 1996), pp 64-73.
 
* James Fraser, Steven Heller, Seymour Chwast, ''Japanese Modern: Graphic Design Between the Wars'', Chronicle Books, 1996, 144 pp. [http://www.adsw.org/perspective/1998/JapaneseModern/ Review].
 
* James Fraser, Steven Heller, Seymour Chwast, ''Japanese Modern: Graphic Design Between the Wars'', Chronicle Books, 1996, 144 pp. [http://www.adsw.org/perspective/1998/JapaneseModern/ Review].
 +
* Toshiharu Omuka, "Tada Dada (Devotedly Dada) For the Stage: the Japanese Movement 1920-1925", in ''The Eastern Dada Orbit: Russia, Georgia, Ukraine, Central Europe and Japan'', ed. Stephen Foster, G.K. Hall, 1998, pp 223-310.
 +
* William O. Gardner, ''Avant-Garde Literature and the New City: Tokyo, 1923—1931 (Japan, Kyojiro Hagiwara, Hayashi Fumiko)'', Stanford University, 1999, 243 pp. Ph.D. Thesis. [http://phdtree.org/pdf/25230978-avant-garde-literature-and-the-new-city-tokyo-1923-1931/]
 +
* ''Avant-garde in Japan: Art into Life 1900-1940'', Kyoto: National Museum of Modern Art, 1999. Catalogue. [http://www.aaa.org.hk/Collection/Details/12670]
 
* Toshiharu Omuka, [http://books.google.com/books?id=LcshAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA244 "Futurism in Japan, 1909-1920"], in ''International Futurism in Arts and Literature'', ed. Günter Berghaus, Walter de Gruyter, 2000, pp 244-270.
 
* Toshiharu Omuka, [http://books.google.com/books?id=LcshAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA244 "Futurism in Japan, 1909-1920"], in ''International Futurism in Arts and Literature'', ed. Günter Berghaus, Walter de Gruyter, 2000, pp 244-270.
* William O. Gardner, ''Avant-garde literature and the New City: Tokyo, 1923—1931 (Japan, Kyojiro Hagiwara, Hayashi Fumiko)'', Stanford University, 1999, 243 pp. Ph.D. Thesis. [http://raforum.info/spip.php?article1172]
 
* ''Avant-garde in Japan: Art into Life 1900-1940'', Kyoto: National Museum of Modern Art, 1999. Catalogue. [http://www.aaa.org.hk/Collection/Details/12670]
 
 
* Miryam Sas, ''Fault Lines: Cultural Memory and Japanese Surrealism'', Stanford University Press, 2001.
 
* Miryam Sas, ''Fault Lines: Cultural Memory and Japanese Surrealism'', Stanford University Press, 2001.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10684 Mavo: Japanese Artists and the Avant-Garde, 1905-1931]'', University of California Press, 2002, 368 pp.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10684 Mavo: Japanese Artists and the Avant-Garde, 1905-1931]'', University of California Press, 2002, 368 pp.
 +
* Toshiko Ellis, "The Topography of Dalian and the Cartography of Fantastic Asia in Anzai Fuyue's Poetry", ''Comparative Literature Studies'', 41:4 (2004), pp 482-500. [http://www.jstor.org/stable/40247445] [http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/comparative_literature_studies/v041/41.4ellis.pdf]
 
* Yoshio Shirakawa (ed.), ''日本のダダ―1920‐1970'', 2005, 168 pp. (in Japanese)  [http://www.aaa.org.hk/Collection/Details/30431]
 
* Yoshio Shirakawa (ed.), ''日本のダダ―1920‐1970'', 2005, 168 pp. (in Japanese)  [http://www.aaa.org.hk/Collection/Details/30431]
 
* William O. Gardner, ''Advertising Tower: Japanese Modernism and Modernity in the 1920s'', Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.
 
* William O. Gardner, ''Advertising Tower: Japanese Modernism and Modernity in the 1920s'', Harvard University Asia Center, 2006.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1779 "Publicity and Propaganda in 1930s Japan: Modernism as Method"], ''Design Issues'' 25:4 (Autumn 2009), pp 13-28.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1779 "Publicity and Propaganda in 1930s Japan: Modernism as Method"], ''Design Issues'' 25:4 (Autumn 2009), pp 13-28.
 
* William J. Tyler (ed.), ''Modanizumu: Modernist Fiction from Japan, 1913-1938'', University of Hawaii Press, 2008, 605 pp. [http://books.google.com/books?id=wwJnQZSosw0C&printsec=frontcover]
 
* William J. Tyler (ed.), ''Modanizumu: Modernist Fiction from Japan, 1913-1938'', University of Hawaii Press, 2008, 605 pp. [http://books.google.com/books?id=wwJnQZSosw0C&printsec=frontcover]
 +
* Majella Munro, [http://www.essex.ac.uk/arthistory/research/pdfs/rebus_issue_4/Munro.pdf "Dada, MAVO and the Japanese Avant-Garde: A Prologue to the Introduction of Surrealism to Japan"], ''re.bus'' 4 (Autumn/Winter 2009).
 +
* Yang Wang, [http://kb.osu.edu/rest/bitstreams/192607/retrieve "Russia Constructed: the Practice of Avant-gardism in Taisho-era Japan, 1912-1926"], 2009.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1778 "Japanese Typographic Design and the Art of Letterforms"], in ''Bridges to Heaven: Essays on East Asian Art in Honor of Professor Wen C. Fong, Vol. 1'', New Jersey: P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art, 2011, 827-848.
 
* Gennifer Weisenfeld, [http://fds.duke.edu/db/attachment/1778 "Japanese Typographic Design and the Art of Letterforms"], in ''Bridges to Heaven: Essays on East Asian Art in Honor of Professor Wen C. Fong, Vol. 1'', New Jersey: P.Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art, 2011, 827-848.
 
* Roy Starrs (ed.), ''[http://scribd.com/doc/118623714/ Rethinking Japanese Modernism]'', Leiden and Boston: Global Oriental, 2012.
 
* Roy Starrs (ed.), ''[http://scribd.com/doc/118623714/ Rethinking Japanese Modernism]'', Leiden and Boston: Global Oriental, 2012.

Revision as of 09:52, 19 August 2014

Woodblock print (ukiyo-e)

Avant-garde

Publications

Mavo
  • "Mavo Manifesto", in the pamphlet for the first Mavo exhibition at Denpōin Temple in Asakusa, 1923; repr. in Nihon no Dada 1920-1970, ed. Yoshio Shirakawa, Tokyo: Hakuba Shobō and Kazenobara, 1988, pp 35-36.
  • Tomoyoshi Murayama, Ichimei ishikiteki kōsei shugi e no dōtei [現在の藝術と未來の藝術 一名、意識的構成主義への道程], 1924.
  • Mavo, July 1924-August 1925, 7 issues. Published by Chōryūsha and edited by Tatsuo Okada and Tomoyoshi Murayama. Magazine inspired by Dada and by the irrationality in Zen. Changed name in October 1928 to Keisei gahō [Formative Pictorial] and became the private publication of Tatsuo Okada. Contributors included Tatsuo Toda and Masamu Yanase. [5]
On art and the machine
  • Tomoyoshi Murayama, "Kikaiteki yōso no geijutsu he no dō'nyū" [The Introduction of Mechanical Elements into Art], Mizue 227 (January 1924).
  • Shin keitai bi danmen [Profile of the New Form of Beauty], Special Issue of Atorie 6:5 (May 1929).
    • Sadanosuke Nakada, [A Theory of the New Form of Beauty].
    • Tomoyoshi Murayama, "Saikin no geijutsu ni okeru kikaibi" [The Beauty of the Machine in Contemporary Art].
  • Takao Itagaki, Kikai to geijutsu to no kōryū [Interactions Between Art and the Machine], Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 1929.
  • Kikai geijutsuron [機械藝術論; Theory of the Machine and Art], Tokyo: Tenninsha [天人社], 1930; repr. by Tokyo: Yumani Shobō, 1991. Articles by ten authors from different fields of art, each writing on the relationship between the machine and their particular genre.
  • Toshimi Kimura (ed.), Kikai to geijutsu kakumei [The Machine and Artistic Revolution], Tokyo: Hakuyōsha, 1930; repr. in Kikai to geijutsu (Korekushon Modan Toshi Bunka 45) [Machine and Art (Modern Urban Culture Collection 45)], ed. Nobuhiko Baba, Tokyo: Yumani Shobō, 2009. Translations of articles by R.M. Fox, Edward J. O'Brien, and others, and two articles by Kimura. The book focuses on reviewing how the machine played crucial roles at the times when various new artistic styles emerged as well as on the relationship between the machine and capitalism or the proletariat.
  • Harue Koga, "Kikai to bijutsu" [The Machine and Art], Wakakusa (June 1931).
Artists' books
  • Hagiwara Kyōjirō, Shikei senkoku [Death Sentence], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 161+6 pp. Illustrated by Mavo. Anthology of visual poetry. [6]
  • Ernst Toller, Tsubame no sho [The Swallow Book], trans. Tomoyoshi Murayama, Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1925, 106 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. [7]
  • Hideo Saito, Aozameta douteikyo [The Pale-Faced Virgin's Mad Thoughts], Tokyo: Chōryūsha, 1926, 120 pp. Illustrated by Tatsuo Okada. Anthology of visual poetry. [8] [9]

Resources

Literature

Anti-art, Non-art

Exhibitions

Resources

Literature

Onkyo

Philosophy of technology