Skip to main content

The Met Presents The Three Perfections: Japanese Poetry, Calligraphy, and Painting from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection

TheMetThreePerfections1200

Yosa Buson (Japanese, 1716–1783), Hanshan and Shide (detail), Edo period, early 1770s, pair of hanging scrolls, ink and color on paper, 55 × 23 3/16 in (139.7 × 58.9 cm), The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection, Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles, 2022 (2022.432.16a, b)

The Three Perfections: Japanese Poetry, Calligraphy, and Painting from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection
August 10, 2024 – August 3, 2025
The Met Fifth Avenue, Galleries 223–232

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is pleased to open a new exhibition drawn from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection of more than 250 Japanese paintings and calligraphy works donated or promised to the Museum. This collection is considered one of the finest and most comprehensive assemblages of Japanese art outside Japan.

In East Asian cultures, the arts of poetry, calligraphy, and painting are traditionally referred to as the “Three Perfections.” The exhibit presents over 160 rare and precious works—all created in Japan over the course of nearly a millennium—that showcase the power and complexity of the three forms of art.

Examples include folding screens with poems brushed on sumptuous decorated papers, dynamic calligraphy by Zen monks of medieval Kyoto, hanging scrolls with paintings and inscriptions alluding to Chinese and Japanese literary classics, ceramics used for tea gatherings, and much more.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Scholten Japanese Art Offers New Prints by Paul Binnie

ScholtenBinnieThree

Paul Binnie (Scottish, b. 1967), L-R: Japanese Zodiac: Dragon (Junishi no Tatsu), hosoban 13 by 5 1/2 in.; Ukiyo-e Sky (Ukiyoe Sora), hosoban 13 1/4 by 5 1/8 in.; A Day At the Beach: Paddling (Hamabe no Tsuika: Hamabe no Tsuika: Soso), hosoban 13 1/8 by 5 1/2 in.

Scholten Japanese Art is pleased to announce the release of two new print designs (as well as an unexpected bonus print) which are the first works launching two separate print series by Paul Binnie: Japanese Zodiac and A Day at the Beach.

Japanese Zodiac depicts men and women with tattoos that represent each of the twelve Japanese zodiac signs. The first print, Dragon, showcases the zodiac for 2024 and is inspired by an ink painting by Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849) to which Binnie added his own colors, and each of the subsequent prints will have a different background color which will give a rainbow effect when finally completed and assembled in order.

A Day at the Beach features nude figures before a beach and skyscape background. The figure was created from the same block set that was used to create Dragon from the Japanese Zodiac series, however, in Paddling an additional block was used to add a sheen of pale blue mica on the figure’s leg to suggest she is still wet from paddling in the ocean.

In Ukiyo-e Sky, the print references its name from the 19th century ukiyo-e prints, where only a slightly shaded strip of color along the top of the sheet was used to depict the blue of the sky.

To learn more about these three enchanting prints, click here.

• • •

Exhibition Rotation of Transcultural Dialogues: The Journey of East Asian Art to the West at Fu Qiumeng Fine Art

FQMTransculturalInstall1200

Installation view, Transcultural Dialogues: The Journey of East Asian Art to the West, Fu Qiumeng Fine Art

Transcultural Dialogues: The Journey of East Asian Art to the West
Second Rotation: August 13 – September 14, 2024

The second rotation of Fu Qiumeng Fine Art’s current exhibition, Transcultural Dialogues: The Journey of East Asian Art to the West, is coming up on August 13th!

Be sure to visit their extraordinary summer exhibition exploring the artistic evolution of East Asian traditions as they spread to the Western art milieu, focusing on the exchange and interaction of visual language and conceptual frameworks between traditional ink art and modern American art.

Transcultural Dialogues showcases works by more than 15 artists, including classical and modern masters Bada Shanren (1626-1705), Qi Baishi (1864-1957) and C.C. Wang (1907-2003), alongside contemporary artists such as Michael Cherney.

Concurrently, a complementary exhibition, Asian-American Abstraction: Historic to Contemporary, is showing at Hollis Taggart Gallery in Chelsea.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

GALLERY SPOTLIGHT: Dai Ichi Arts, Ltd.

DaiIchiSetoSpotlight

Group of E-Seto Ceramics

Specializing in modern Japanese ceramics, Dai Ichi Arts, Ltd. is beaming in our Gallery Spotlight this week. Since 1989, they have featured significant ceramic works to New York’s contemporary art scene and have placed pieces in important private and public museum collections around the world.

Beatrice Chang is the founder and director of the gallery and a leading expert in Japanese and Chinese ceramics, providing guidance to a diverse clientele ranging from casual enthusiasts to dedicated collectors and museum curators. With her deep connections with artists, Chang has championed and introduced contemporary Japanese ceramics to her clients through inspiring exhibitions and online catalogs.

Dai Ichi Arts’ current exhibit, Tales of Seto: An Exhibition of E-Seto Ceramics, is one such example, as it embarks on a journey through time, into the old origins of ceramics from the Seto region encompassing a range of historical periods from Edo, to Meiji and Showa, celebrating the ceramics of what is now known as “E-Seto.” This is the last week to appreciate the origins of Seto pottery, so be sure to visit before the show closes on August 9th!

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Summer Museum Shows Not to Miss – Part II

ArtInstChicagoKabuki850

Tōshūsai Sharaku, The Actor Ichikawa Omezō as the Manservant Ippei in The Loved Wife’s Parti-Colored Reins (detail), 1794; Courtesy Art Institute Chicago

Continuing with our list of not-to-miss exhibitions from our AWNY member museums, below are some more fantastic exhibitions currently on view across the country. Be sure to visit them if you’re in town or traveling to these cities!

Art Institute Chicago
Kabuki-Actor Portraits by Tōshūsai Sharaku
Through October 14, 2024

In this newly opened exhibit, the Art Institute explores the short but generative career of Tōshūsai Sharaku, who produced around 150 prints representing Kabuki actors between the summer of 1794 and early spring of 1795.  In a mere ten months, these prints of unusual characters with exaggerated, almost comic expressions and awkward poses were popular mementos for fans of the stage.

To learn more, click here.

ClevelandSixDyn800
Hunting on Horses (騎馬狩獵) (detail), c. 1600s–1700s, China, Ming dynasty to Qing dynasty; Courtesy The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art
Six Dynasties of Chinese Painting
Closing Sept 1, 2024

Six Dynasties of Chinese Painting presents a selection of the museum’s most important paintings that cover six different dynasties, including the modern era. These paintings represent various subject matter, from figures, landscapes, animals, birds, and flowers to religious and historic themes; their dates of acquisition range from the museum’s founding years to the most recent additions, demonstrating a continuous commitment to Chinese painting, a field that has always been the strongest asset of The Cleveland Museum’s Chinese collection.

To learn more, click here.

DenverTokio-Ueyama800
Tokio Ueyama, The Evacuee, 1942, oil on canvas, 24 x 30 in; Courtesy Japanese American National Museum; Gift of Kayoko Tsukada; ©Estate of Tokio Ueyama; Courtesy Denver Art Museum

Denver Art Museum
The Life and Art of Tokio Ueyama
July 28, 2024 – June 1, 2025

Newly opened last week, The Life and Art of Tokio Ueyama tells the story of Ueyama’s life, including his early days as an art student in San Francisco, Southern California, and Philadelphia; his travels abroad in Europe and Mexico; his role as artist and community member in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles; and his incarceration during World War II at the Granada Relocation Center, now the Amache National Historic Site, in southeast Colorado.

To learn more, click here.

HarvardLiuDan800
Liu Dan 劉丹, Scholar’s Rock, 1993, ink on paper; Purchase through the generosity of Alan J. and Suzanne W. Dworsky and through the Ernest B. and Helen Pratt Dane Fund for Asian Art, 2003.83. © 1993 Liu Dan; Courtesy Harvard Art Museums

Harvard Art Museums
East Asian Art Gallery Reinstallation
Through December 1, 2024

One of the highlights in their recently reinstalled East Asian Art Gallery is this ink on paper work by Liu Dan. For at least 2,000 years, Chinese artists and scholars have collected unusually shaped stones, commonly known as “scholars’ rocks,” to display in their studios and gardens, regarding them as microcosmic landscapes to be explored in the mind’s eye. Rendered on an almost planetary scale, Liu Dan’s Scholar’s Rock is part of a larger display at the Harvard Art Musuems examining the many ways in which artists in East Asia have manipulated scale to change the viewer’s perception of a subject.

To learn more, click here.

NelsonAtkinsRubbing800
Rubbing of Ritual Disc with Dragon Motifs (Bi) (detail), China, 19th-early 20th c., hanging scroll, ink on paper, 14 5/16 in (36.35 cm); Bequest of Laurence Sickman, F88-45/110; Courtesy Nelson Atkins Museum of Art

Nelson Atkins Museum of Art
The Art of Ink Rubbings: Impressions of Chinese Culture
July 20, 2024 – February 02, 2025

This newly opened exhibition features more than 25 rubbings, as well as some of the original objects, offering a window into the remarkable practice, variety, and allure of Chinese ink rubbing. As early as 600 C.E., scholars and collectors commissioned ink rubbings to preserve ancient inscriptions carved on stone or bronze. Due to its simplicity, beauty, and affinity to important historical objects, ink rubbings’ popularity endured despite advances in other reproductive media. In the 1930s, future Nelson-Atkins director Laurence Sickman (1907–1988) amassed an extensive collection of ink rubbings and, with other collectors, introduced Chinese ink rubbings to a global audience.

To learn more, click here.

SAMZeshin1200
Shibata Zeshin, Japanese, 1807-1891, Still Life with Vegetables, 19th c., colored lacquer and gold leaf on paper, 7 1/8 × 10 5/8 in (18.1 × 27 cm); On loan from The Catherine and Thomas Edson Collection, L.2009.10.3; Courtesy San Antonio Museum of Art

San Antonio Museum of Art
The Exquisite Art of Shibata Zeshin: Lacquerwares and Paintings
Through October 27, 2024

Japanese lacquerwares reached a pinnacle in the work of artist Shibata Zeshin during the Meiji period (1868–1912). Zeshin was a multi-talented artist who learned traditional painting techniques but was also extraordinarily skilled in using lacquer. Notably, he adapted this difficult medium to painting by inventing a way to maintain the flexibility of the lacquer so that a scroll could be rolled without cracking. Works on view include sake ewers, stacked boxes for food, storage boxes for paper and clothing, writing boxes with inkstones and brushes, and paintings.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Summer Museum Shows Not to Miss – Part I

AsiaSocietyCoalIce800

Installation view, COAL + ICE, Asia Society

As we head into August, why not spend these late summer days exploring some fascinating art exhibitions in and around New York City at our Asia Week New York member museums listed below? There’s a great mix of newly opened shows and those that are about to close, so be sure to catch them all in the coming weeks!

Asia Society
COAL + ICE
Closing August 11, 2024

Closing this coming Sunday, this immersive photography and video exhibition brings together the works of more than 37 photographers and artists from China and around the world that visualize the causes and consequences of the climate crisis. While the exhibit brings to life the environmental and human costs of climate change, it also highlights the innovative solutions that provide hope for a more sustainable future.

To learn more, click here.

BrooklynMuseumKONDO00
Kondō Takahiro, Reflection: TK Self Portrait, 2010., glazed porcelain, 19 1/16 × 6 3/16 in. (48.5 × 15.7 cm), Carol and Jeffrey Horvitz Collection, © Kondō Takahiro, photo by Richard P. Goodbody and John Morgan; Courtesy Brooklyn Museum

Brooklyn Museum
Museum Spotlight: Porcelains in the Mist: The Kondō Family of Ceramicists
Through December 8, 2024

Porcelains in the Mist brings together 61 pieces that celebrate the Kondō family’s innovations and talents. Their early creations range from freehand-painted vases to pure-white jars. Most of the works on view are by the younger ceramicist, Kondō Takahiro (b. 1958), who invented the technique of “silver mist,” or gintekisai, as seen in his self-portrait sculpture above. Describing this effect as “water born from fire,” he often pairs his mists with dramatic shapes and textures.

To learn more, click here.

KCCNYJinheeLeeCrop
Courtesy Korean Cultural Center NY

Korean Cultural Center NY
Jinhee Lee: Boundaries of Existence
Closing August 17, 2024

Boundaries of Existence by Jinhee Lee, professor in the Department of Stage Design at the Korea National University of Arts and award-winning costume designer of films and Korean dramas, features stage design pieces from Lee’s career since 1999, traditional Korean costume designs for film, and her sculptures, paintings, and media art. In this exhibition, Lee combines sculptural characteristics with three-dimensional media to emphasize a dynamic and immersive experience. Her works embody a free and bold aesthetic sense, reflecting Korea’s unique nature-friendly philosophy.

To learn more, click here.

TheMetTiffanyList
Courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Collecting Inspiration: Edward C. Moore at Tiffany & Co.
Through October 20, 2024

This newly opened exhibition features the personal collection of Edward C. Moore, the creative force who led Tiffany & Co. to unparalleled originality and success during the second half of the 19th century. His collection of decorative arts were of exceptional quality and in various media, from Japanese baskets to metalwork from the Islamic world, and were a great source of inspiration for Moore and the designers he supervised.  The show features more than 180 pieces from his collection that were donated to the Museum, alongside 70 magnificent silver objects designed and created at Tiffany & Co. under his direction.

To learn more, click here.

SmithsonianImagined-Neighbors1200
Landscape (detail), Hosokawa Rinkoku (1782–1842), Japan, Edo period, 1835, handscroll, ink and color on paper, Freer Gallery of Art Collection, National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, The Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection, Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles, F2021.4.11a–c; Courtesy National Museum of Asian Art

National Museum of Asian Art
Imagined Neighbors: Japanese Visions of China, 1680–1980
Closing September 15, 2024

Imagined Neighbors presents Japanese artworks from the Mary and Cheney Cowles Collection, which was gifted to the Museum between 2018 and 2022 and is arguably the largest and most comprehensive group of Japanese literati works outside of Japan. The paintings and calligraphy in this exhibition fuse reality with imagination and remain important to understanding the continuing, complex engagement of Japanese artists with China, to them both a real and an imagined place.

For learn more, click here.

PhilMythCreatures800
Artist/maker unknown, Astrological Sign of Capricorn, c. 1810-1820, Indian; Courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art

Philadelphia Museum of Art
Mythical Creatures: China and the World
Through June 1, 2025

This exhibition explores the theme of diversity by bringing together mythical creatures from China as well as across Asia and Europe. Representations of paintings, prints, sculptures, ceramics, textiles, and contemporary toy bricks, dating from the 1000s to today illustrate how these fantastical beasts, although sometimes perceived as the same, are quite different.

To learn more, click here.

NewportBreakersElephant1200
The Great Elephant Migration: A Coexistence Story, The Breakers; Courtesy The Preservation Society of Newport County

The Preservation Society of Newport County
The Great Elephant Migration: A Coexistence Story
Through September 6, 2024

Come face-to-face with 26 life-size Indian elephant sculptures as they parade across the back lawn of The Breakers this summer. The Great Elephant Migration is an outdoor art exhibition presented by Elephant Family USA in collaboration with Dodie Kazanjian of Art & Newport and various contemporary artists. It promotes human-wildlife coexistence as a solution to biodiversity loss. Each elephant is also available for purchase with proceeds going towards non-governmental organizations performing conservation work around the world.

To learn more, click here.

RubinReimagineInstall800
Installation View, Reimagine: Himalayan Art Now, Rubin Museum of Art

Rubin Museum of Art
Reimagine: Himalayan Art Now
Through October 6, 2024

These are the last few months to experience this Museum-wide exhibition before The Rubin closes their physical location and transition into a global museum model on October 6, 2024. With over 30 contemporary artists, many from the Himalayan region and diaspora and others inspired by Himalayan art and cultures, this show contemplates and celebrates what Himalayan art means now inviting new ways of encountering traditional Himalayan art.

To learn more, click here.

YaleYearofDragonInstall800
Installation View, Year of the Dragon, Yale University Art Gallery

Yale University Art Gallery
Year of the Dragon
Through November 10, 2024

This exhibition celebrates this Year of the Dragon with a presentation of nearly 30 artworks spanning from the 17th century to the present day.  The objects on view, which are largely drawn from their collection, feature dragons on folding screens, paintings, textiles, ceramics, ivory, and woodblock prints. Taking inspiration from East Asian history, folklore, and myth, these works demonstrate a long, complex, and continuing artistic tradition around this fantastical creature.

To learn more, click here.

• • •

Ralph M. Chait Galleries Participating in the Nantucket Show

ChaitNantucket1200

Chinese Export Porcelain American Market Sailor’s Farewell Teapot, c. late 18th c., h: 5 ⅜ in (14.5 cm)

The Nantucket Show
August 9 – 12, 2024
Benefit Morning Preview: Fri, 9:30-11am
Hours: Fri, 11am-6pm; Sat, 10am-6pm; Sun, 10am-5pm; Mon, 10am-3pm
Bartlett’s Farm, 33 Bartlett Farm Road, Nantucket, MA

Ralph M. Chait Galleries is pleased to be returning this summer to the Nantucket Show from August 9-12.

It’s a perfect time to travel to this idyllic island, so be sure to stop by and visit them to view their array of beautiful porcelain, pottery and works of art!

This year’s show, which includes 28 carefully selected fine antiques dealers and art galleries from the US and abroad, offers art and antiques in every category from antique jewelry to contemporary and traditional fine art and decorative objects. The exhibitors will not only be in an air-conditioned tent, but also be showing in a new location, one of Nantucket’s favorite places, Bartlett’s Farm. Organized by the Antiques Council, this not-for-profit organization is committed to supporting charitable organizations that benefit the Island of Nantucket, its history, and architecture.

To learn more, click here.

ChaitSummerCat1000

Also be sure to check out Ralph  M. Chait Galleries’ recently released Summer Booklet filled with a variety of Chinese porcelains and works of art. Included are their own ancient Chinese pottery “Olympians,” important famille verte porcelain figures of the Dauphin and Mme. de Maintenon, and other superb porcelains, works of art and China Trade objects. They range in style from pieces made for both the Chinese and the export markets, and the fascinating in-between!

To view the catalog online, click here.

• • •

Thomas Murray Exhibiting in Santa Fe

ThomasMurraySantaFe1200

Tun Tun Babi Pig Trap Charms, Borneo

Whitehawk Antique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Santa Fe
August 9–12, 2024
Preview: Friday, Aug 9, 6-9pm
Fair Hours: Saturday-Sunday, Aug 10-11, 10am-5pm; Monday, Aug 12, 10am-3pm

Santa Fe Community Civic Center, 201 W Marcy St, Santa Fe, NM 

With expertise in Asian, tribal and textile art, as well as animistic art from other varied cultures, Thomas Murray is pleased to be exhibiting at the Whitehawk Antique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show Santa Fe from August 9 to 12.

The Whitehawk Antique Indian & Ethnographic Art Show has been a Santa Fe tradition for over 46 years. Bringing together more than 127 of the world’s most knowledgeable experts, visitors will be exposed to thousands of select historic art objects from Native American and other indigenous cultures from around the world.

Plan your travel today to view the gallery’s fine collection of tribal works of art, such as this trio of Tun Tun Babi Pig Trap Charms from Borneo!

To learn more and purchase tickets, click here.

• • •

Cleveland Museum of Art’s Virtual Lunchtime Lecture

CMASevenMountTalk1200

Visitors in the immersive Seven Jeweled Mountain exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Art

Virtual Lunchtime Lecture: Making Into the Seven Jeweled Mountain
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
12:00 – 1:00pm
Free on Zoom (registration required)

Join the Cleveland Museum of Art staff next Tuesday for a quick bite of art history! Learn about their current immersive experience, Into the Seven Jeweled Mountain, where viewers are surrounded by vivid animations inspired by a 19th century folding screen that illustrates the mountain’s striking scenery. This ten-panel screen, Seven Jeweled Mountain, is on view just outside the experience exclusively at the Cleveland Museum of Art.

Named Seven Jeweled Mountain from a local legend claiming seven different kinds of jewels—gold, silver, pearls, coral, seashells, agate, and crystal—were buried in there, this natural wonder gained popularity after Im Hyeong-soo (1514–1547) published a detailed travelogue about his hiking experience. Pulling from his experience, viewers are taken through a virtual hike amid swiftly changing weather, unique geological features, and breathtaking vistas in this immersive display, offering a rare opportunity to discover a place beyond reach. 

During this lunchtime lecture, Sooa McCormick, Korea Foundation Curator of Korean Art, introduces her research on the historical accounts used in the content of this groundbreaking exhibition, and Jane Alexander, chief digital information officer, provides a rare window into the production process for immersive digital experiences and a glimpse into what’s next.

To learn more and register for this informative talk on Zoom, click here.

• • •

China and Newport: A Journey through Two Centuries Lecture at Rosecliff

NewportTalk1200

Standing Screen, Li Ailian, 19th century, Gift of Mrs. Elizabeth M. Smith

The Eaddo & Peter Kiernan Lecture
China and Newport: A Journey through Two Centuries
Tuesday, August 6th at 6pm EDT
Rosecliff, 548 Bellevue Ave, Newport, RI
Free in-person or via Zoom

Join The Preservation Society of Newport County for China and Newport: A Journey through Two Centuries, one of their annual Eaddo & Peter Kiernan Lectures next Tuesday, August 6th. Their Curatorial Research Fellow, Dani Zhang, will discuss her exploration of Chinese artwork and objects, many produced for a Western market, held in the collection of The Preservation Society of Newport County. Through a close examination of materials, forms and motifs, she will illuminate the nuanced relationship between Chinese art, American collecting and display practices from the China Trade as part of the Gilded Age.

Many of these works were showcased in their groundbreaking exhibition at Rosecliff, The Celestial City: Newport and China, which has just been honored by the American Association for State and Local History with its Award of Excellence. This prestigious award is a tribute to the thorough and thoughtful work of their Curator of Collections, Dr. Nicole Williams, and staff researchers who uncovered untold stories of Newport’s history: the contributions of Chinese and Chinese American individuals to life in Newport from the 18th century through the Gilded Age. We congratulate them on this great honor!

To learn more and register for the lecture, click here.

• • •