July 15–December 3, 2023
1285 Sengokuhara
Hakone, Kanagawa 250-0631
Japan
Hours: Monday–Sunday 9am–5pm
T +81 460 84 2111
info@polamuseum.or.jp
While visiting Japan as a foreign advisor hired by the Meiji government, the art historian Ernest Fenollosa (1853–1908) referred to all of the paintings he came across as “Japanese paintings.” This term was translated by Japanese interpreters as Nihonga (Japanese pictures), which, it has been suggested, subsequently led the Nihonga concept to take root in Japanese society.
In other words, after coming into contact with Western-style painting, traditional Japanese painting became established as a new form of expression known as Nihonga. As the genre emerged during a period of cultural chaos as Japan was formed a modern state, Nihonga painters were inevitably dogged with questions about what it meant to be “modern,” “Western,” and a “nation.” Following the Second World War, Nihonga was in some quarters declared dead, but the work of contemporary Nihonga painters, who strove to create a new form of Japanese painting that would transcend modern Nihonga led to a new phase in the genre’s history.
What is the potential for present-day Nihonga in this age of accelerated globalization, which has rendered meaningless the distinction between East and West, and the 21st-century art scene, which has grown increasingly diverse in terms of subject, form, and material? In this exhibition, we reexamine leading Nihonga figures of the Meiji, Taisho, and early Showa eras, the expressive methods of Yasushi Sugiyama and other postwar Nihonga painters, and the diverse practices of artists who are currently exploring the essence of the Japanese pictures today and tomorrow.
Exhibition structure
Prologue: The Birth of Nihonga
Major featured artists: Gaho Hashimoto, Gyokusho Kawabata, Hogai Kano, Yuichi Takahashi, Chu Asai, Shotaro Koyama
Section 1: Meiji and Taisho Nihonga
Major featured artists: Taikan Yokoyama, Shunso Hishida, Kanzan Shimomura, Chu Asai, Kiyoo Kawamura, Soryu Tamura
Section 2: Innovation in Nihonga
Major featured artists: Taikan Yokoyama, Shunso Hishida, Keigetsu Kikuchi, Hoan (Misei) Kosugi, Keisen Tomita, Saburosuke Okada, Ryusei Kishida, Léonard Foujita (Tsuguharu Fujita)
Section 3: Materiality in Postwar Nihonga
Major featured artists: Eikyu Matsuoka, Kyujin Yamamoto, Tatsuo Takayama, Kaii Higashiyama, Yasushi Sugiyama, Matazo Kayama, Toshimitsu Imai, Hisao Domoto
Section 4: The Future of Japanese Painting: Beyond Nihonga
Major featured artists: Taro Yamamoto, Reina Taniho, Tomoko Hisamatsu, Naoto Sunohara, Natsunosuke Mise, Kei Arai, Makoto Fujimura, Tetsuya Noguchi, Riusuke Fukabori, Motoi Yamamoto, Yoshitaka Amano, Lee Ufan, Cai Guo-Qiang, Hiroshi Sugimoto