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Two young Japanese women stand pressed close beneath pale pink cherry blossoms, their bodies arranged almost as a single shape against a saturated blue ground. Both wear softly patterned morning kimonos opened low at the chest, one in greenish tones and the other in warmer brown-gold, with thick obi belts tied behind them like sculptural wings. Their skin is pale, their cheeks lightly flushed, and their black hair is dressed in smooth, glossy coils pinned with blossoms. They face us calmly, almost solemnly, but their hands meet at the center in a gesture that feels private and deliberate.

The plate’s printed caption reads PETITES_AMIES, and the vertical cartouche bears the artist’s Japanese name, 英一蝶 (Hana Itchō known as Hanabusa Itchō). The image is decorative, but not distant as the closeness of their bodies, the touch of their joined hands, and the mirrored elegance of their pose make the pair feel intimate and composed.

The original text around this illustration sharpens that intimacy into meaning. The women are introduced as “enlacées ainsi” (entwined like that) to hold each other. A few pages later, the narrator insists, “Elles ne se quittent jamais” or they never leave one another. Another line says they are not deceived by love, but have outwitted it and hold it “captif sur leurs lèvres pareilles” (captive on their matching lips). Those phrases transform the image from a pretty Belle Époque fantasy into a vision of feminine attachment imagined as mutual pleasure, refuge, and alliance.

At the same time, the work belongs to a French japoniste book culture that stylized Japan for Parisian readers, so its beauty is inseparable from European performance and projection. That tension is part of its power now. The print offers cherry blossoms, elegance, and theatrical grace, but also a rare early-20th-century image in which two women appear not merely adjacent, but bound to one another by touch, companionship, and choice.

Two young Japanese women stand pressed close beneath pale pink cherry blossoms, their bodies arranged almost as a single shape against a saturated blue ground. Both wear softly patterned morning kimonos opened low at the chest, one in greenish tones and the other in warmer brown-gold, with thick obi belts tied behind them like sculptural wings. Their skin is pale, their cheeks lightly flushed, and their black hair is dressed in smooth, glossy coils pinned with blossoms. They face us calmly, almost solemnly, but their hands meet at the center in a gesture that feels private and deliberate. The plate’s printed caption reads PETITES_AMIES, and the vertical cartouche bears the artist’s Japanese name, 英一蝶 (Hana Itchō known as Hanabusa Itchō). The image is decorative, but not distant as the closeness of their bodies, the touch of their joined hands, and the mirrored elegance of their pose make the pair feel intimate and composed. The original text around this illustration sharpens that intimacy into meaning. The women are introduced as “enlacées ainsi” (entwined like that) to hold each other. A few pages later, the narrator insists, “Elles ne se quittent jamais” or they never leave one another. Another line says they are not deceived by love, but have outwitted it and hold it “captif sur leurs lèvres pareilles” (captive on their matching lips). Those phrases transform the image from a pretty Belle Époque fantasy into a vision of feminine attachment imagined as mutual pleasure, refuge, and alliance. At the same time, the work belongs to a French japoniste book culture that stylized Japan for Parisian readers, so its beauty is inseparable from European performance and projection. That tension is part of its power now. The print offers cherry blossoms, elegance, and theatrical grace, but also a rare early-20th-century image in which two women appear not merely adjacent, but bound to one another by touch, companionship, and choice.

“Petites Amies” (Girlfriends) by 英一蝶 / Hanabusa Itchō (Japanese) - Color engraving / 1912 - Poupée japonaise (Paris, France) #WomenInArt #英一蝶 #HanabusaIttcho #hanabusa #挿絵#BookIllustration #Japonisme #ジャポニスム #art #artText #artwork #美人画 #JapaneseArt #JapaneseArtist #日本美術 #百合 #BelleEpoque #1910sArt

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The Misses Salomon (1888) - Anders Zorn (1860–1920) #watercolor #japonisme

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Lavender fox corrected update.

#Kitsune #fox #art #yukata #traditionalart #sketch #WIP #workinprogress #summer #originalart #artist #Lavender #lavenderfox #vulpus #japonism #japonisme #duelismart

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📢 New out!

Nile Green shows how Meiji-era modern hotels served as mechanisms for an informal and amateur mode of learning about Japanese culture.

#tourism #inter-Asia #trans-imperial #travelwriting #arthistory #Japonisme #Shinto #Buddhism #Urdu #Persian

Read more here: doi.org/10.1017/S174...

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Frances Leyland (was the wife of the Liverpool shipping magnate, Frederick Leyland, who also commissioned from Whistler the famous Peacock Room (Freer Gallery of Art, Washington). Using subtle tones of pink, gray, and the sitter's "flesh color," Whistler harmonized the subject's setting—the salon of his Chelsea home—with her "tea gown," which he designed by drawing from Japanese, French, and classical elements. The white paneling on the lower portion of the wall meets the patterned wood floor, which is partly covered with a rug and tilted upward. The tilting gives the composition a flattening quality. Along with the inclusion of plum blossoms at left and the application of his butterfly monogram at right, slightly overlapped by slender green leaves, the composition reflects Whistler's fascination with Japanese woodblock prints. The artist also designed the painting's gilt frame with its geometric design.

Frances Leyland (was the wife of the Liverpool shipping magnate, Frederick Leyland, who also commissioned from Whistler the famous Peacock Room (Freer Gallery of Art, Washington). Using subtle tones of pink, gray, and the sitter's "flesh color," Whistler harmonized the subject's setting—the salon of his Chelsea home—with her "tea gown," which he designed by drawing from Japanese, French, and classical elements. The white paneling on the lower portion of the wall meets the patterned wood floor, which is partly covered with a rug and tilted upward. The tilting gives the composition a flattening quality. Along with the inclusion of plum blossoms at left and the application of his butterfly monogram at right, slightly overlapped by slender green leaves, the composition reflects Whistler's fascination with Japanese woodblock prints. The artist also designed the painting's gilt frame with its geometric design.

Symphony in Flesh Colour and Pink: Portrait of Mrs. Frances Leyland by James Abbott McNeill Whistler, 1871-1874, The Frick Collection (New York City, NY)

#ArtHistory #ModernArt #Impressionism #Japonisme #Realism

See Cocktails with a Curator for a discussion of this work: youtu.be/vAVlWxw9wh8?...

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Japonisme Reignites in Tokyo’s Mukojima A New Cultural Experience Invites Visitors to Walk, Print, and Take Home the World of Hokusai – Experience Edo Culture with All Five Senses through an Ukiyo-e Walking Tour, Woodblock Printing Workshop, and Artisan Studio Shopping – TOKYO, Feb. 6, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — A new cultural tourism program titled “Ukiyo-e Guided Walking Tour + Woodblock Printing Experience and Artisan Studio Shopping” has been launched in the Mukojima area of Tokyo, offering visitors an immersive way to experience traditional Edo-period culture. This program combines the rich heritage of ukiyo-e art with contemporary craftsmanship, integrating a guided neighborhood walk, hands-on woodblock printing, […]

Japonisme Reignites in Tokyo’s Mukojima #Japonisme #Tokyo #EdoCulture #UkiyoE #CulturalTourism

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Discover the Essence of Japonisme with a Cultural Walk in Tokyo's Mukojima Join a unique cultural experience in Tokyo's Mukojima, featuring a guided walking tour, woodblock printing, and artisan shopping, rooted in Edo tradition.

Discover the Essence of Japonisme with a Cultural Walk in Tokyo's Mukojima #Japan #Tokyo #Hokusai #Mukojima #Japonisme

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Lilian May Miller (1895-1943)⁠
Morning Snow on Bamboo, Japan (A)⁠

For more info visit: www.scholten-japanese-art.com/printsV/3383

#WoodblockPrint #LillianMiller #Japonisme #SnowDay #ScholtenJapaneseArt

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La Japonaise au bain (1864) - James Tissot #japonisme #nude_painting

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The Fiancés (Les Fiancés) (1874) - Marie-François Firmin-Girard (1838–1921) #academic_realism #japonisme

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The Gift (also known as The Present or Le Cadeau) (1866-71) - Alfred Stevens #academic_realism #aestheticism #japonisme

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This image contrasts an elegant woman having her patterned gown fitted with the kneeling form of a seamstress, who wears a simple brown dress. It is one in a set of ten color prints that Cassatt showed at her first independent exhibition, held at the Galerie Durand-Ruel, Paris, in 1891. All depict women engaged in everyday activities, with four using mirrors to extend and complicate the pictorial space.

This image contrasts an elegant woman having her patterned gown fitted with the kneeling form of a seamstress, who wears a simple brown dress. It is one in a set of ten color prints that Cassatt showed at her first independent exhibition, held at the Galerie Durand-Ruel, Paris, in 1891. All depict women engaged in everyday activities, with four using mirrors to extend and complicate the pictorial space.

The Fitting by Mary Cassatt, c. 1891, McNay Art Museum (San Antonio, TX)

#ArtHistory #ModernArt #Impressionism #Japonisme

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Painted around 1919, this portrait shows Chilean artist Judith Alpi’s early command of modern intimacy. In her mid-twenties, freshly trained at Santiago’s Escuela de Bellas Artes and aligned with the Generación del Trece, Alpi balanced academic draftsmanship with a softened, atmospheric palette. 

A light-skinned woman sits on a low, blue-upholstered daybed. She has a sleek short black bob, red lips, and a calm, watchful gaze turned to our left. Her white kimono is loosely wrapped and dotted with pale pink blossoms as it drops in wide sleeves and opens to show one bare shin. Embroidered slippers repeat the floral tones. A thin bracelet and a ring add small flashes of shine. At her side, a large blue ceramic vase holds flowering branches above a table draped in patterned cloth. The room dissolves into cool gray-blue planes, letting the woman and blossoms be the quiet center of the painting.

The kimono and blossoming branch nod to japonisme, an imported visual language that Chilean artists and collectors used to signal cosmopolitan taste, but the scene feels less like costume than chosen self-presentation. The sitter remains unidentified, but her relaxed crossed legs, visible skin, and sidelong look suggest a private room where she can inhabit elegance on her own terms. White cloth can be both refuge and spotlight while the small pink flowers, poised between bud and bloom, hint at transience and becoming.

Alpi was also an avid collector of European and Chilean art, and her own practice returned again and again to portraiture … especially images of women artists and intellectuals. She later helped found the Sociedad Nacional de Bellas Artes and taught in several public institutions, shaping the next generation as well as her own. The painting’s early honors (including recognition in the 1919 Salón Oficial and a medal at the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition in Seville) underscore how seriously her contemporaries took women’s authorship in the public art sphere.

Painted around 1919, this portrait shows Chilean artist Judith Alpi’s early command of modern intimacy. In her mid-twenties, freshly trained at Santiago’s Escuela de Bellas Artes and aligned with the Generación del Trece, Alpi balanced academic draftsmanship with a softened, atmospheric palette. A light-skinned woman sits on a low, blue-upholstered daybed. She has a sleek short black bob, red lips, and a calm, watchful gaze turned to our left. Her white kimono is loosely wrapped and dotted with pale pink blossoms as it drops in wide sleeves and opens to show one bare shin. Embroidered slippers repeat the floral tones. A thin bracelet and a ring add small flashes of shine. At her side, a large blue ceramic vase holds flowering branches above a table draped in patterned cloth. The room dissolves into cool gray-blue planes, letting the woman and blossoms be the quiet center of the painting. The kimono and blossoming branch nod to japonisme, an imported visual language that Chilean artists and collectors used to signal cosmopolitan taste, but the scene feels less like costume than chosen self-presentation. The sitter remains unidentified, but her relaxed crossed legs, visible skin, and sidelong look suggest a private room where she can inhabit elegance on her own terms. White cloth can be both refuge and spotlight while the small pink flowers, poised between bud and bloom, hint at transience and becoming. Alpi was also an avid collector of European and Chilean art, and her own practice returned again and again to portraiture … especially images of women artists and intellectuals. She later helped found the Sociedad Nacional de Bellas Artes and taught in several public institutions, shaping the next generation as well as her own. The painting’s early honors (including recognition in the 1919 Salón Oficial and a medal at the 1929 Ibero-American Exposition in Seville) underscore how seriously her contemporaries took women’s authorship in the public art sphere.

“Kimono blanco (White Kimono)” by Judith Alpi (Chilean) - Oil on canvas / c. 1919 - Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Santiago, Chile) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #JudithAlpi #Alpi #MuseoNacionalDeBellasArtes #MNBA #ChileanArt #BlueskyArt #ArtText #Japonisme #WomenPaintingWomen

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official auction photo of the vase, front profile view
Porcelain vase painted with decoration of brown & blue crabs in a gardenesque reef, including anemones resembling Su flowers

official auction photo of the vase, front profile view Porcelain vase painted with decoration of brown & blue crabs in a gardenesque reef, including anemones resembling Su flowers

closeup of one of the crab design, vase laid on side

closeup of one of the crab design, vase laid on side

Samuel Schellink (painter) for Rozenburg (manufacturer, Netherlands)
Eggshell porcelain vase with polychrome #crab & reef decor, model 90, c.1900
freemansauction.com/auctions/642...
#ArtNouveau #Japonisme

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New Year Dreams

Cette œuvre comprend également des explications sur les motifs et la culture japonaise que j'ai illustrés. Découvrez ce monde de dessins délicats et de couleurs japonisantes.

www.behance.net/gallery/2391...

#CultureJaponaise #Japonisme #Illustration #BoardGameArt #boardgame

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photo of the woodcut invitation in white mat on display at museum 

LES
ATTiS DE L'ART
JAPONAiS
seréunizont
a diner au Restaurant du
Cardinal
Adbésions
au
D'Ancelet
104
zuede Rennes
Le Lundi 10 Avril 1911

with illustrations of 4 grasshoppers

photo of the woodcut invitation in white mat on display at museum LES ATTiS DE L'ART JAPONAiS seréunizont a diner au Restaurant du Cardinal Adbésions au D'Ancelet 104 zuede Rennes Le Lundi 10 Avril 1911 with illustrations of 4 grasshoppers

Charles-Louis-Marie Houdard (France, 1855-1931)
Invitation to the Dinner for Friends of Japanese Art, 1911
Color woodcut
On display at Zimmerli Art Museum, Ruthers University (1991.0384)
#Japonisme #grasshoppers

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Photo of the painting in thick gold frame on display at museum 
very long tall composition 
Painting of a small brown owl perched on front of a full moon on branches blooming with pink flowers 
Japonisme style

Photo of the painting in thick gold frame on display at museum very long tall composition Painting of a small brown owl perched on front of a full moon on branches blooming with pink flowers Japonisme style

closeup of the owl in front of moon

closeup of the owl in front of moon

gallery label:
“Charles Caryl COLEMAN
American (1840-1928)
Night Owl
1879
Oil on canvas
In memory of the deceased members of the class of 1954
1988.0794
Born in Buffalo, New York, Coleman left for Paris in 1859 but returned to the United States in 1862
to fight for the Union in the Civil War. By 1866, he had been honorably discharged and was living in Rome as part of the American expatriate circle.
This painting of an owl perched on a flowering tree and silhouetted against a full moon is a daring composition that pays homage to the asymmetry, harmonious color, and flatness that European and American artists admired in Japanese art. The artist designed frame complements the abstract design of the painting and features the artist's triple-C monogram in all
four corners.”

gallery label: “Charles Caryl COLEMAN American (1840-1928) Night Owl 1879 Oil on canvas In memory of the deceased members of the class of 1954 1988.0794 Born in Buffalo, New York, Coleman left for Paris in 1859 but returned to the United States in 1862 to fight for the Union in the Civil War. By 1866, he had been honorably discharged and was living in Rome as part of the American expatriate circle. This painting of an owl perched on a flowering tree and silhouetted against a full moon is a daring composition that pays homage to the asymmetry, harmonious color, and flatness that European and American artists admired in Japanese art. The artist designed frame complements the abstract design of the painting and features the artist's triple-C monogram in all four corners.”

Charles Caryl Coleman (USA, 1840-1928)
Night #Owl, 1879
Oil on canvas
On display at Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University (1988.0794)
#BirdsInArt #Japonisme

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Un poster pour Madame Butterfly, une femme en kimono devant un shōji

Un poster pour Madame Butterfly, une femme en kimono devant un shōji

Science-fiction et exotisme

https://wiesmann.codiferes.net/wordpress/archives/41439

#Erdorin #Exotisme #Japon #Japonisme #JDR #ScienceFiction #TigresVolants #WorldBuilding

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Noel Nouet (1885-1969)
Scenes of Tokyo, Twenty-four Views: Tokyo, Temple de Kanda Miyojin, 1950

For more info visit: www.scholten-japanese-art.com/printsV/4619

#woodblockprint #NoelNouet #Japonisme #AcholyenJapaneseArt

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not creepy, Sharon. #Japonisme! And it's good that Westernes started to link bats with Asia where the bat isn't creepy at all but a harbinger of good fortune. "Fortune as tall as a mountain and longevity as deep as the ocean."!

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https://www.alaintruong.com/2024/08/firing-the-imagination-japanese-influence-on-french-ceramics-1860-1910-at-philadelphia-museum-of-art.html

https://www.alaintruong.com/2024/08/firing-the-imagination-japanese-influence-on-french-ceramics-1860-1910-at-philadelphia-museum-of-art.html

🦇 #BatsInArt #PreciousBats #DecorativeArt #French #Japonisme #EdmondLachenal
Edmond Lachenal (1855 - 1948)
VASE WITH BATS AND BLOSSOMS, ca. 1895
Glazed earthenware

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The model for this portrait was Takeko (竹子), the daughter of Matsukata Kojiro's (松方幸次郎) eldest brother, Matsukata Iwao (松方幸巌). She married Kuroki Sanji (黒木三次), the oldest son of Kuroki Tamemoto (黒木為楨), a famous admiral in the 1904-1905 Russo-Japanese War. Takeko and her husband Sanji lived in Paris for three years starting in 1919, and there they become friendly with both French artists Claude Monet and Edmond Aman-Jean. 

They were particularly interested in Monet and frequently visited the painter in his house at Giverny. It was the Kuroki's, who introduced Matsukata Kojiro to Monet. It is said that on that one visit, Matsukata purchased 16 works directly from Monet. There is a photograph taken by Sanji of Takeko, in full kimono, and Monet standing on the top of the bridge in the Japanese garden in Monet's famous home. For Monet, enamored of all things Japanese, this was likely a happy moment.

Tapping into the Japonisme fascination during this period, the Kuroki couple asking Aman-Jean to paint Mrs. Kuroki's portraits wearing full Japanese kimono, not their normal dress in their Parisian lifestyle. The serene portrait depicts Takako, elegantly dressed in a beautiful, intricately designed kimono, predominantly light blueish-gray, overlaid with designs in lighter shades of off-white and gold, hinting at stylized birds, flowers, and landscapes. Her partially visible footwear is traditional Japanese sandals. In her left hand (our right), she holds a folded piece of paper and in her right hand is a closed fan. Her short dark hair is neatly arranged and pulled back from her face. She appears quite poised. The impressionistic background colors are muted greens and pinks—harmonizing colors providing a calm, tranquil atmosphere.

The Kuroki's brought dozens of art works back to Japan, but this portrait was not yet complete when the couple left Paris. For many years Takeko's portrait remained with the Matsukata collection in Paris, and wasn't brought to Japan until 1959.

The model for this portrait was Takeko (竹子), the daughter of Matsukata Kojiro's (松方幸次郎) eldest brother, Matsukata Iwao (松方幸巌). She married Kuroki Sanji (黒木三次), the oldest son of Kuroki Tamemoto (黒木為楨), a famous admiral in the 1904-1905 Russo-Japanese War. Takeko and her husband Sanji lived in Paris for three years starting in 1919, and there they become friendly with both French artists Claude Monet and Edmond Aman-Jean. They were particularly interested in Monet and frequently visited the painter in his house at Giverny. It was the Kuroki's, who introduced Matsukata Kojiro to Monet. It is said that on that one visit, Matsukata purchased 16 works directly from Monet. There is a photograph taken by Sanji of Takeko, in full kimono, and Monet standing on the top of the bridge in the Japanese garden in Monet's famous home. For Monet, enamored of all things Japanese, this was likely a happy moment. Tapping into the Japonisme fascination during this period, the Kuroki couple asking Aman-Jean to paint Mrs. Kuroki's portraits wearing full Japanese kimono, not their normal dress in their Parisian lifestyle. The serene portrait depicts Takako, elegantly dressed in a beautiful, intricately designed kimono, predominantly light blueish-gray, overlaid with designs in lighter shades of off-white and gold, hinting at stylized birds, flowers, and landscapes. Her partially visible footwear is traditional Japanese sandals. In her left hand (our right), she holds a folded piece of paper and in her right hand is a closed fan. Her short dark hair is neatly arranged and pulled back from her face. She appears quite poised. The impressionistic background colors are muted greens and pinks—harmonizing colors providing a calm, tranquil atmosphere. The Kuroki's brought dozens of art works back to Japan, but this portrait was not yet complete when the couple left Paris. For many years Takeko's portrait remained with the Matsukata collection in Paris, and wasn't brought to Japan until 1959.

Portrait of a Japanese Woman (Mrs. Kuroki) aka 日本婦人の肖像 (黒木夫人) by Edmond Aman-Jean (French) - Oil on canvas / 1922 - National Museum of Western Art (Tokyo, Japan) #WomenInArt #art #PortraitofaWoman #ArtText #artwork #EdmondAman-Jean #Aman-Jean #NMWA #国立西洋美術館 #Japonisme #kimono #Japanese #BlueskyArt

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https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Lantern-form-vase-with-moon-and-bats/E1994FAB1009F724F23A77AD7A231F8F

https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Lantern-form-vase-with-moon-and-bats/E1994FAB1009F724F23A77AD7A231F8F

🦇 #BatsInArt #PreciousBats #DecorativeArt #French #Japonisme #EdmondLachenal
Edmond Lachenal (1855 - 1948)
VASE WITH BATS AND MOON, ca. 1895
Glazed earthenware

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QP Japonisme Art

"Family"

#AIArt #midjourney #japonisme #family

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https://www.tademagallery.com/jewellery/d/jugendstil-bat-choker/206467#

https://www.tademagallery.com/jewellery/d/jugendstil-bat-choker/206467#

🦇 #BatsInArt #PreciousBats #FineJewellery #German #ArtNouveau #Japonisme #TheodorFahrner
Theodor Fahrner (1859 - 1919)
BAT CHOKER, 1900
Silver and enamel

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#Anker #Japan #Ins #centrealbertanker #Japan #Japonisme

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In England during the mid-1860s, American artist James McNeill Whistler undertook a series of works in which recognizably British models in exotic costumes are depicted as Japanese courtesans surrounded by objects from the artist’s personal collection of Asian art. 

In “Caprice in Purple and Gold,” Whistler presents Joanna Hiffernan, an Irish model, in the guise of a Japanese lady wearing richly embroidered silks, contemplating a woodblock print from Utagawa Hiroshige’s Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces, an iconic series of meisho-e, or images of notable places. Decorative objects from both Japan and China surround her, including a large gold Japanese folding screen.

When Charles Lang Freer first saw this painting in 1902, he had acquired an impressive collection of Japanese prints and paintings as well as hundreds of works by Whistler. Freer declared that Caprice was “one of the most perfect things in composition and coloring in the whole range of Mr. Whistler’s art.”

The painting is an early example of Japonisme, a term coined by the French art critic Philippe Burty in 1872. It refers to the fashion for Japanese art in the West and the Japanese influence on Western art and design following the opening of formerly isolated Japan to world trade in 1853.

James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American painter in oils and watercolor, and printmaker, active during the American Gilded Age and based primarily in the United Kingdom. He eschewed sentimentality and moral allusion in painting and was a leading proponent of the credo "art for art's sake.” 

His signature for his paintings took the shape of a stylized butterfly with an added long stinger for a tail. The symbol combined both aspects of his personality: his art is marked by a subtle delicacy, while his public persona was combative. He found a parallel between painting and music, and entitled many of his paintings "arrangements", "harmonies", and "nocturnes", emphasizing the primacy of tonal harmony.

In England during the mid-1860s, American artist James McNeill Whistler undertook a series of works in which recognizably British models in exotic costumes are depicted as Japanese courtesans surrounded by objects from the artist’s personal collection of Asian art. In “Caprice in Purple and Gold,” Whistler presents Joanna Hiffernan, an Irish model, in the guise of a Japanese lady wearing richly embroidered silks, contemplating a woodblock print from Utagawa Hiroshige’s Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces, an iconic series of meisho-e, or images of notable places. Decorative objects from both Japan and China surround her, including a large gold Japanese folding screen. When Charles Lang Freer first saw this painting in 1902, he had acquired an impressive collection of Japanese prints and paintings as well as hundreds of works by Whistler. Freer declared that Caprice was “one of the most perfect things in composition and coloring in the whole range of Mr. Whistler’s art.” The painting is an early example of Japonisme, a term coined by the French art critic Philippe Burty in 1872. It refers to the fashion for Japanese art in the West and the Japanese influence on Western art and design following the opening of formerly isolated Japan to world trade in 1853. James Abbott McNeill Whistler was an American painter in oils and watercolor, and printmaker, active during the American Gilded Age and based primarily in the United Kingdom. He eschewed sentimentality and moral allusion in painting and was a leading proponent of the credo "art for art's sake.” His signature for his paintings took the shape of a stylized butterfly with an added long stinger for a tail. The symbol combined both aspects of his personality: his art is marked by a subtle delicacy, while his public persona was combative. He found a parallel between painting and music, and entitled many of his paintings "arrangements", "harmonies", and "nocturnes", emphasizing the primacy of tonal harmony.

“Caprice in Purple and Gold: The Golden Screen” by James McNeill Whistler (American) - Oil on wood / 1864 - National Museum of Asian Art (Washington, D.C.) #womeninart #japonisme #art #oilpainting #womensart #JamesMcNeillWhistler #Whistler #NationalMuseumofAsianArt #NMAA #AmericanArtist #ArtText

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Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890), ‚Bridge in the rain (after Hiroshige)‘, 1887, oil on canvas 73.3 x 53.8 cm.

#vangoghmuseum #afterhiroshige #onehundredfamousviewsofedo #shinohashibridge #hiroshige #japonisme

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A brick wall hosts 5 French sculpted and painted vases and urns influenced by Japanese style and subject matter : cranes, bamboo, florals. The bamboo urn is overflowing with fruit tree blossoms; a vase decorated with single chrysanthemums holds an enormous wild rose of a similar shape; a blue parrot flies across the picture plane, and a little girl eating an apple (sculpted but unpainted) sits under the fruit blooms.

A brick wall hosts 5 French sculpted and painted vases and urns influenced by Japanese style and subject matter : cranes, bamboo, florals. The bamboo urn is overflowing with fruit tree blossoms; a vase decorated with single chrysanthemums holds an enormous wild rose of a similar shape; a blue parrot flies across the picture plane, and a little girl eating an apple (sculpted but unpainted) sits under the fruit blooms.

Impression de la japonisme

Photos taken at the #PhiladelphiaMuseumofArt, found #flowers, #bird, & brick texture. #analogcollage
#art #japonisme #artaboutart

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#ninahaikoart #sketch #foxart #foxsketch #paintwhatyoulove #japonism #japonisme #chinoiserie #artforinteriors #taidettakotiin #womenwhopaint #drawing #colorplay

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