Download - Japanese Arts and Music

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Page 1: Japanese Arts and Music
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Paintings1. Scroll Painting (Emaki)2. Screen and Partition

Painting (Shoheiga)3. Buddhist Painting (Batsuga)4. Ink Painting (Suibokuga)5. Literal Painting (Bunjinga)

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• Sometimes called ekotoba• contains pictures rendered on a

handscroll which opens horizontally• They sometimes contain written

explanatory comments (kotobagaki)

• Designed to be viewed in sequence when unrolled from right to left.

Scroll Painting (Emaki)

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Heiji Monogatari Emaki(Illustrated Stories about the Heiji Civil War)

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Genji Monogatari Emaki (The Tale of Genji Handscroll)

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Screen and Partition Painting (Shoheiga)

• “shoheiga" includes pictorial decoration applied either to partitions (shoheki) or to screens (byobu)

• "partition decoration" (shohekiga) denotes paintings on tsuitate (single-leaf screens), fusuma (sliding door or wall panels), ceiling panels, and cryptomeria doors as well as paintings on paper applied to walls

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Screen Painting of Kyoto and Environs

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• Refers to mandalas and painted representations of Buddhist deities used as objects of worship

• It refers to all paintings that have some relationship to Buddhism

Buddhist Painting(Batsuga)

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Ryokai Mandar

a (Mandalas of the

Two Realms)

Kongokai mandara

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• These are paintings done in black ink (sumi), in which nuances are expressed through variations in brush techniques and through contrasted shadings of ink.

Ink Painting (Suibokuga)

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Landscape of Autumn and

Winter

Hawks and Pines

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• This genre includes paintings produced by intellectuals as a hobby or a complement to their literary interests.

Literal Painting(Bunjinga)

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Ukiyoe• literally, "pictures of the floating world“• Paintings depicting manners and

customs done on many fusuma (sliding partitions)

• Originated with the experiments of producing woodblock prints of beautiful

women.

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Sculpture•called a "material-dependent

art" •made from bronze or a single

piece of wood•and had Buddhist connotation

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• The earliest forms of music were drums and flute music

• gagaku ancient court music• Sho (free-reed mouth organ),

hichiriki (cyndrical oboe),the biwa lute, and the koto zither.

• shamisen (three-stringed plucked lute)

Japanese Music

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Gagaku Performance

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Sho

The upper

part has 17

bamboo pipes of differen

t lengths.

Hichiriki It is a single bamboo pipe about 18 cm long with 7 finger-holes on the front and 2 on the back. Thin strips of cherry bark are wrapped around it between the holes.

Instrument Used In Gagaku Court Music

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Instrument Used In Gagaku Court Music

Gakuso formally called So

Gakubiwi 4-stringed lute

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Japanese Dance• Kagura (dance of the gods) is the

oldest form of dance in Japan• Gigaku, masked dance-drama• Bugaku (court dance)• Sarugaku, an acrobatic or circus-

like performance• Shinbuyo, New Dance

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Kagura Dance

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Gigaku Dance

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Bugaku Dance

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Kabuki• designed to entertain an audience with

dramatic dialogue and dance of male actors

• accompanied by drums, flutes, stringed instruments called shamisen and chanting

• plays to the rapid clapping of wooden clappers

• average length of a performance is (5) five hours, including intermissions

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Noh and Kyogan• a poetic dance-drama performed in

ancient language with highly ritualized movements along

• Kyogen are straightforward plays dealing with ordinary people in the real world

• a wooden structure with a Shinto shrine-style curved roof (no stage curtain )

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Noh and Kyogan• Actors are not more than three and

plays two 30-minute comic kyogen in between play

• themes are generally Buddhist, • the main message is that man should

not become attached to the world, for it is a world of illusion

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Bunraku

• a sophisticated puppet theater written and performed for adult audiences with cultivated sensibilities

• puppets are one-half to full life-size. • Each major character is jointly

manipulated by 3 puppeteers, who appear on stage in full view of the audience.

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Bunraku• The main puppeteer generally appears

bare-faced, while the others are "invisible" in black hoods.

• The main puppeteer manipulates the eyelids, eyeballs, eyebrows, mouth, and the right arm.

• A first assistant operates the left arm only, and a second assistant the legs.

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THE ENDVenus and Cindy