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Blanton exhibit reveals lesser-known art passion of writer James Michener
'Exquisite Visions of Japan' showcases several centuries of Japanese woodblock prints.
By Jeanne Claire van Ryzin
Austin American-Statesman
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Here in Austin, best-selling author James A. Michener is remembered by art aficionados for the singular collection of 20th-century American paintings that he donated to the Blanton Museum of Art. An early supporter of the University of Texas museum (he began giving artwork as early as 1968), Michener also donated $10 million toward a new museum building.
But before the Pulitzer Prize winner amassed his American paintings collection, he busied himself with a very different art passion: Japanese woodblock prints.
Now, an exhibit culled from the Michener Collection at the Honolulu Academy of Arts lands at the Blanton, giving Austin a chance to see the other side of the collector and philanthropist who helped shape the Blanton. More than 50 prints spanning three centuries are featured in "Exquisite Visions of Japan" on view through Aug. 24.
The Honolulu Academy's Michener Collection boasts 5,400 prints the author bequeathed upon his death in 1997.
When Michener began collecting Japanese woodblock prints in the late 1940s, it was hardly a fashionable pursuit. His service with the U.S. Navy in World War II and in the years afterward took him around the South Pacific and Japan, an experience that led to his discovery of the art form. Michener found the colorful, delicately rendered prints "one of the most totally delightful art forms ever devised ... its allurement infinite."
True to his methodical nature, Michener's research on the art form led to his 1954 book on the growth and decline of the Japanese woodblock prints, "The Floating World," one of the first full-length English-language studies on the subject.
The art of ukiyo-e, or "pictures of the floating world," emerged at the beginning of the 1600s in the bustling metropolitan culture of Edo (modern-day Tokyo). At the time, Japan was a country virtually isolated from the rest of the world. Yet while the ruling shoguns might have kept a tight rein on the political sphere, Edo's burgeoning middle class enjoyed a certain cultural freedom that allowed them to "float" free of too much official interference. Teahouses, geishas, sumo wrestling and Kabuki theaters flourished. And to celebrate these entertainments, artists produced woodblock prints depicting Edo's popular culture. Famous Kabuki actors and wrestlers or beautiful courtesans became the subjects of mass-produced prints that were sold to and casually collected by a moneyed middle class, much like baseball cards or movie posters are today. The prints were both affordable and ubiquitous. Particular prints went in and out of fashion as tastes — and popular culture icons — changed.
The number of prints in good condition that survive today is not vast by most measures. Michener's collection — the bulk of which he bought from a Chicago collector — is in particularly good shape.
By the time Japan began to open its borders in the mid-19th century, the heyday of ukiyo-e prints was waning. However, they were eagerly snapped up by a curious West suddenly hungry for all things Japanese. Indeed, "Japonisme," to use the term coined by one critic, was all the rage in 1870s Europe and the decades following. Creatives of all types were inspired by Japanese aesthetics, from painters such as Vincent van Gogh and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec to Italian composer Giacomo Puccini, who penned the opera "Madame Butterfly." Likewise, among their many popular comic operettas, W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan wrote "The Mikado."
Interest in Japanese art and culture was at a low point in post-World War II America when Michener began acquiring woodblock prints. But his interest was unwavering, his passion for Japanese woodblock prints as much cultural advocacy as anything else. "I must stress that Japanese prints are a joy," he wrote in "The Floating World." "In the long history of man's persistent attempts to create beauty, these prints are one of the gratifying successes."
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