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Japan's Ironic Enticement
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18350 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
9 / 1990 |
1,867 Words |
| Author
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Julia Meech Julia Meech is a Japanese art Consultant living in New York
City. She is the author of The World of the Meiji Print. |
The impact of the West on Japan and of Japan on the West in the late nineteenth century is endlessly fascinating. It is a story of exploitation, adulation, and constant misunderstanding. Whey was there such a vogue for Japanese art (and Japonisme) in America at the turn of the century? Perhaps most importantly because it was new, which is to say “exotic.” In addition, at the instigation of such influential interior decorators as Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933) in New York, it came to be fashionable; moneyed people were buying it, setting the trend. At a time when crafts in general were held in high esteem, the Orient was a fresh discovery.
After 1859, when Japan emerged from more than two centuries of isolation and Yokohama was enlarged as a treaty port for foreigners, the demand for Japanese merchandise grew in the West. The new government that took power at the beginning of the Meiji era (1868-1912) sent its artisans overseas to study the market and learn modern techniques. Their products, often more Victorian than Japanese, were then exported to international expositions, where thereby earning foreign currency needed to finance the industrialization of Meiji Japan.
Between the Vienna International Exposition of 1873 and the London exposition of 1910, Japan participated in at least twenty-five foreign exhibitions. The fair that made Americans sit up and take notice was the Philadelphia Centennial of 1876, a kind of Olympic competition of art and industry in which the products of different countries were pitted against one another. The Japanese exhibit feasted large, gaudy, realistically modeled bronzes, ceramics, and lacquers, most of which were specially made for the export market. The cult of Japan in America was initiated by
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