日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home / News Type Content Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Donated Japanese Collection on Display
Adjust font size:

The China National Art Museum has received a batch of ancient and modern Japanese art works donated by Li Pingfan, a retired veteran art editor with the People's Publishing House of Fine Arts in Beijing.

This is the first time the national museum has received such a large collection of donated Japanese art works, including 137 Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints, 218 modern Japanese prints and 546 works of Japanese Ex Libris, or bookplates, according to museum curator Yang Lizhou.

"After our panel of experts carefully examined them, we concluded that the donated works are authentic and very valuable," Yang said.

A grand exhibition featuring the donated Japanese works along with 190 selected works of Chinese ink and color paintings, sketches and decorative paintings on ceramics by Li himself is being held at the museum.

The exhibition will run until February 15.

Born in 1922 in Tianjin, Li learned both traditional and Western art styles from an early age, and since the mid-1930s has devoted most of his energy to the art of printmaking.

He moved to Japan and worked as a teacher of fine arts in 1943, and in his spare time collected a large number of Japanese works of art with his own savings.

In 1950, Li returned to China working for the People's Publishing House of Fine Arts.

Since the 1950s, Li has played an active role in promoting the art of printmaking in China by holding numerous lectures, and training programs across the country, as well as promoting cultural exchanges between Chinese and Japanese artists by arranging artist visits and exhibitions.

He also acted as editor-in-chief of the academic Art of Print-making magazine in the 1980s.

The most remarkable among the exhibits are the Ukiyo-e prints. The art of Ukiyo-e ("pictures of the floating world") originated in the metropolitan culture of Edo (today known as Tokyo) in ancient Japanese history, when political and military power was in the hands of the shoguns. The country was almost virtually isolated from the rest of the world, according to Li.

The Ukiyo-e print is an art genre closely connected with the pleasures of theatres, restaurants, tea houses, geishas and courtesans from the city, which even during that period was considered heavily populated.

Many Ukiyo-e prints were in fact posters, advertising theatre performances and brothels, or idol portraits of popular actors and beautiful teahouse girls, experts say.

But this more or less sophisticated world of urban pleasures was also animated by the traditional Japanese love of nature.

Some Japanese Ukiyo-e artists have exerted considerable impact upon landscape painting all over the world.

(China Daily January 29, 2004)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Japan Exhibit Features High-tech Art
- Takarazuka to Stage Chinese Traditional love story
- Arts Will Capture Audience Hearts
- Exhibition Honors Friendship
- Japanese Woodblock Prints Donated to Museum
Most Viewed >>
- World's longest sea-spanning bridge to open
- Yao out for season with stress fracture in left foot
- 141 seriously polluting products blacklisted
- China starts excavation for world's first 3G nuclear plant
- 'The China Riddle'
- Irresponsible remarks on Hu Jia case opposed 
- China, US agree to step up constructive,cooperative relations
- Factory fire kills 15, injures 3 in Shenzhen
- FIT World Congress: translators on track
- Christianity popular in Tang Dynasty

Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys
主站蜘蛛池模板: 荔波县| 中卫市| 蕲春县| 洛扎县| 平陆县| 江油市| 长泰县| 伊吾县| 临沧市| 星子县| 二连浩特市| 安顺市| 鞍山市| 内乡县| 隆尧县| 阿坝县| 高邮市| 南阳市| 青岛市| 惠州市| 潼南县| 赤壁市| 龙门县| 涞源县| 阜南县| 望城县| 台安县| 方正县| 泰和县| 称多县| 桑日县| 绥宁县| 伊川县| 柏乡县| 拜泉县| 基隆市| 闸北区| 台南市| 永昌县| 原阳县| 屯门区|