Japan – Fragility of Existence

Masterpieces from the Genzō Hattori Collection

28 September 2012 – 4 February 2013

18.02.2013

Katsushika Hokusai, The Great Wave at Kanagawa, 1830 © Collection Leopold II

In the autumn of 2012, the exhibition »Japan – Fragility of Existence« will for the first time show a representative selection of around 50 masterful examples of traditional Japanese ink painting (Sumi-e) and calligraphy (Shodō) from the Genzō Hattori Collection. Owned by Genzō Hattori’s daughter-in-law, Mrs. Toyoko Hattori, this private collection includes works from the 12th to the 20th century. The works from this extraordinary collection, which have never been publicly displayed before, will be complemented by previously unseen Japanese color woodcuts dating from the 17th to the 20th century from the Leopold Collection II.

Leopold Collection II
Ukiyo-e, Netsuke, Nō Theatre Masks

A second section of the exhibition presents Japanese colour woodcuts from the Leopold Collection II, which have never been seen by the public. These are primarily works by Hokusai (1760-1849) and Hiroshige (1797-1858). Also popular in this era were netsuke, miniature sculptures that well-to-do Japanese wore on their belts in the Edo period.

Masterworks from the Genzō Hattori Collection
Ink Drawings, Calligraphy and Folding Screens from Eight Centuries

The art collector Genzō Hattori (1888-1964) - son of Kintarō Hattori (1860-1934), founder of the world-famous Seiko Corporation - was, alongside his entrepreneurial activity, a chajin who cultivated the tea ceremony and the Japanese arts associated with it, most of all shodō, calligraphy. Chadō, the “way of tea”, is a lifestyle emphasising humanity and aesthetic sensibility, and it has had a profound effect on Japanese art and culture.

Photographs by Katsuhiro Ichikawa
Daily Life / Fukushima 1998 - 2006

Over the course of a number of years, the Japanese photographer Katsuhiro Ichikawa documented the
surroundings in which his parents-in-law lived, only a few miles from the atomic power plant Fukushima. Today the area is uninhabitable as a result of the reactor accident. The still photos show a paradise lost on account of human failure.

Kyoko Adaniya-Baier - Margit Hartngel - Roman Scheidl - Kurt Spurey - Marko Zink

Works by five contemporary artists, which are related to aspects of Japanese aesthetics, draw attention to the transcultural currency of the theme “fragility of existence”, while at the same time representing an echo of the distant, yet inwardly so near Japan.

 

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