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Form Of Art Sixteenth Century
1,094 wordsThe brilliant and intimately appealing art of the unido-e woodblock print is undoubtedly the most well-known of all Japanese arts. This particular style of art flourished in Japan from the mid-seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century. The word Ukiyo-e was originally Buddhist and meant "sad world." By the seventeenth century, however, the meaning evolved to mean "floating world. " The "world" was one of transient pleasures and freedom from the cares and concerns of the world. The prints and pain...
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Suzuki Harunobu Eighteenth Century Prints
1,108 words... till women) were especially prominent. The early eighteenth century was a period of development in print-making. The quality of the paper improved; shapes and sizes of prints became varied; and polyptych were introduced. Techniques of printing became more sophisticated. The urusei-e (lacquer-print) was developed, in which certain areas of black are made to shine by mixing glue with the printing-ink. The greatest innovation in technique, however, was in the use of color. From the earliest tim...
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Main Character Five Categories
676 wordsNoh is a classical Japanese performance form which combines elements of dance, drama, music and poetry into one highly aesthetic stage art. Largely based in the cities of Tokyo, Osaka, and Kyoto, it is performed throughout the country by professional artists, mainly men, who have passed down the art among family members for numerous generations. There is also a wide following of both male and female amateurs who practice and perform its chant, dance, and instruments Kyogen is the classical comic...
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Kabuki Theatre In Japan
1,187 wordsThree characters referring to dance, music, and skill represent kabuki in the Japanese language. Kabuki is the traditional Japanese form of theatre. Tradition has it that kabuki was founded in 1603, in the Edo period, by a Shinto priestess named Okuni. Dressed like man, she and her troupe of mainly women performed dances and sketches on a stage set up in the riverbed of the Kamogawa River in Kyoto. Kabuki theatre, in contrast with older Japanese art forms such as Noh, was cultured for the townsp...
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Feudal Japan Tenno Shogun And Daimyo
610 wordsFeudal Japan: Tenno, Shogun and Daimyo The origins of Japan are buried in the fantastic and mysterious legends. Tenno Ten " no (? ? ) is the Emperor of Japan. Tenno is a title head of State as well as the head of the Japanese Imperial Family. The term Tenno is used to describe the Japanese Emperor, and can be literary translated as god-king or the heavenly Emperor. According to the Japanese history, Jimmy Tenno, the head of confederation of warlike clans, was the first person who received the na...
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19 Th Century East And West
714 wordsThe Purpose Origami Rough Draft The Purpose of this paper is to show where origami originated from, and why it is so popular today. Origami originated in many different places. It was used as far back as 1185, in the Japanese Heian period. The origins of origami are still in dispute, but it seems that all countries say they started it. Of these, China, Japan, Indonesia, and Korea all claim ownership. Origami has a long history in both the east and west, but all styles of origami are more of a so...
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