Japanese
Sculpture
Japanese sculpture
derived from Shinto funerary and Buddhist religious
arts. Portrait sculpture was developed only as a
memorial to a shrine patron or temple founder. Materials
traditionally used were metal--especially bronze--and,
more commonly, wood, often lacquered, gilded, or
brightly painted. By the end of the Tokugawa period,
such traditional sculpture--except for miniaturized
works-- had largely disappeared because of the loss of
patronage by Buddhist temples and the nobility.
The stimulus of
Western art forms returned sculpture to the Japanese art
scene and introduced the plaster cast, outdoor heroic
sculpture, and the school of Paris concept of sculpture
as an "art form." Such ideas adapted in Japan
during the late nineteenth century, together with the
return of state patronage, rejuvenated sculpture. After
World War II, sculptors turned away from the figurative
French school of Rodin and Maillol toward aggressive
modern and avant-garde forms and materials, sometimes on
an enormous scale. A profusion of materials and
techniques characterized these new experimental
sculptures, which also absorbed the ideas of
international "op" (optical illusion) and
"pop" (popular motif) art. A number of
innovative artists were both sculptors and painters or
printmakers, their new theories cutting across material
boundaries.
In the 1970s, the
ideas of contextual placement of natural objects of
stone, wood, bamboo, and paper into relationships with
people and their environment were embodied in the mono-ha
school. The mono-ha rtists emphasized
materiality as the most important aspect of art and
brought to an end the anti-formalism that had dominated
the avant-garde in the preceding two decades. This focus
on the relationships between objects and people was
ubiquitous throughout the arts world and led to a rising
appreciation of "Japanese" qualities in the
environment and a return to native artistic principles
and forms. Among these precepts were a reverence for
nature and various Buddhist concepts, which were brought
into play by architects to treat time and space
problems. Western ideology was carefully reexamined, and
much was rejected as artists turned to their own
environment--both inward and outward--for sustenance and
inspiration. From the late 1970s through the late 1980s,
artists began to create a vital new art, which was both
contemporary and Asian in sources and expression but
still very much a part of the international scene. These
artists focused on projecting their own individualism
and national styles rather than on adapting or
synthesizing Western ideas exclusively.
Outdoor sculpture,
which came to the fore with the advent of the Hakone
Open-Air Museum in 1969, was widely used in the 1980s.
Cities supported enormous outdoor sculptures for parks
and plazas, and major architects planned for sculpture
in their buildings and urban layouts. Outdoor museums
and exhibitions burgeoned, stressing the natural
placement of sculpture in the environment. Because hard
sculpture stone is not native to Japan, most outdoor
pieces were created from stainless steel, plastic, or
aluminum for "tension and compression" machine
constructions of mirror-surfaced steel or for elegant,
polished-aluminum, ultramodern shapes. The strong
influence of modern high technology on the artists
resulted in experimentation with kinetic, tensile forms,
such as flexible arcs and "info-environmental"
sculptures using lights. Video components and video art
developed rapidly from the late 1970s throughout the
1980s. The new Japanese experimental sculptors could be
understood as working with Buddhist ideas of
permeability and regeneration in structuring their
forms, in contrast to the general Western conception of
sculpture as something with finite and permanent
contours.
In the 1980s, wood
and natural materials were used prominently by many
sculptors, who now began to place their works in inner
courtyards and enclosed spaces. Also, a Japanese feeling
for rhythmic motion, captured in recurring forms as a
"systematic gestural motion," was used by both
long-established artists like Kiyomizu Kyubei and
Nagasawa Hidetoshi and the younger generation led by
Toya Shigeo. The 1970s search for a national identity
led to a renewed understanding of Japanese forms,
spatial perceptions, rhythms, and philosophical
conceptions, which reinvigorated Japanese sculpture in
the 1980s.
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