The Graphic Impact of Japanese Prints

Consider it a visual dialog between contemporary artists and their counterparts from two to three centuries ago.

“There are parallels between 18th- and 19th-century Japan and today’s world,” says Miwako Tezuka, curator of “Edo Pop: The Graphic Impact of Japanese Prints,” and director of Japan Society Gallery.  “People were starting to create their own entertainment back then– it was when Japanese theater got started.  It’s similar to what’s happening today, with the rise of entertainment and popular culture.”

The exhibit began first at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts (MIA), with a catalog of 300 ukiyo-e woodblock prints.  Tezuka, though, has juxtaposed 30 works by 10 contemporary artists with 100 of the MIA pieces.

“We wanted to put up works by artists who can make connections between the popular culture of the past with the culture of today,” she says.  “We wanted to show work from prints to photography, with some watercolors and some installations.”

True to the chic and playful aesthetic of the Edo period (1615-1868), Japan Society Gallery commissioned AIKO, a graffiti artist based in Brooklyn, to create at the entry to the exhibition a wall-size mural that pushes a tough, urban and pop sensibility that also references traditional ukiyo-e motifs. Other present-day artists selected to participate are Emily Allchurch (London), Paul Binnie (London), Ishii Toru (Saitama prefecture), Kazama Sachiko (Tokyo), Tomokazu Matsuyama (New York), and Masami Teraoka (Hawaii).

One of Edo Pop’s themes is “Images of Beauty,” explored in juxtapositions suggesting that the role of provocateur was as familiar to ukiyo-e practitioners as it is to artists today. At the beginning of the exhibition, AIKO’s pert, liberated ‘grrls’ and a number of other images of women are placed in close dialog with sensual and fashionable ukiyo-e depictions of female entertainers and denizens of brothels.

“Some of the women and courtesans were very well-educated, and showed off new fashions and trends,” she says. “The artists depicted their beauty, just as images of male and female models show the beauty of today’s people.”

Some things, it seems, will never change.

The exhibition opens in Manhattan on March 9 at the gallery, located at 333 East 47th Street between First and Second Avenues.

For more information, go to www.japansociety.org.

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