Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Thames & Hudson Ltd, London, 2013
ISBN 10: 0500239134 ISBN 13: 9780500239131
Anbieter: Jorge Welsh Books, Lisboa, Portugal
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Dust Jacket Included. 1st Edition. English text.; Hardcover (with dust jacket).; 25 x 34.5 cm.; 2.1 kg.; 240 pages with 220 illustrations in colour and black and white.; Includes several loose reviews of the book.; Used with signs of wear on the exterior and interior. The dust jacket shows minor wear marks, edge wear, scuffs and scratches. Interior with minor signs of wear.; From the 1860s through to the 1890s the rise of Japonisme and the Art Nouveau movement meant few could resist the obsession with all things Japanese. Superbly crafted and often highly decorated Japanese objects - lacquer, metalwork, ceramics, enamels and other decorative items rich in new and exotic subject matter - stimulated and inspired Western artists and craftsmen to produce their own works. Arts of the Meiji period (1868-1912) were displayed at international exhibitions, in the galleries of influential dealers and at fashionable stores in London, Paris and Vienna. Artists from Van Gogh, Whistler, Monet and Manet to Klimt and Schiele were all, to varying degrees, influenced by the arts of Japan. Van Gogh himself stated that he owed his inspiration to Japanese art, but he was probably not conscious of the full extent to which art in Europe had already been greatly influenced by that of Japan. Here, six renowned scholars and specialists examine the wider influence of Japanese art and design in Europe with superlative examples from the Khalili Collection, the world's finest collection of works from the Meiji period. They demonstrate that the Japanese influence on modern Western art has been far more penetrating than has been widely recognized.