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Taisho Chic: Japanese Modernity, Nostalgia and Deco
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Taking its name from the reign of Emperor Taisho (1912-1926),the
Taisho Era designates a brief but dynamic period of cultural change when Japan was
becoming a modern, international presence. Some Japanese artists of the period
experimented with Western aesthetics and artistic techniques (such as oil and watercolor),
while others emphasized traditional Japanese subject matter, materials, and aesthetics
such as the romanticized landscapes of nihonga painting. These were also the formative,
silent-era years of cinema. The soul of Taisho chic lies in the Japanese flirtation with
all things progressive, modern, exotically Western. Curator Kendall H. Brown has captured
this essence by framing the exhibit as a meditation on the rise of modan gaaru (moga), or the modern girl (and
modern boy), corresponding roughly to the new womanJazz-Age
flappers, pre-Code Hollywood starlets, Josephine Baker and the cafe and night club
sceneemerging in the public cultural eye in the West.
As in the West, these new women were typically sales clerks,
secretaries, and waitresses, yet found their desires framed in the easy affluence of the
newly emerging mass consumer culture. Most striking is Three Sisters (1936) by Shuho Yamakawa, in which
three daughters of a wealthy industrialist are formally arranged in and around the
familys luxury touring car. One young woman sits in the rear seat, her face framed
by the window, the second sits inside, leaning slightly forward toward the open suicide
door, and the third stands, right arm stretched out over the hood, clutching a small purse
in her left hand. As the motionless, but aerodynamically designed car suggests speed, so,
too, the three poised women are clustered so as to suggest a cascading movement, as if
spilling out of the car and into the foreground. All in mute beiges, the four-panel
painting captures a formally Japanese jazz-like riff on the dynamic of Deco design.
Another example of East-West hybridity is captured in three variants of
Woman (1930) by Daizaburo Nakamura, including
the two-panel screen, a full-scale draft, and its reproduction in a painted porcelain
Hakata ningyo doll. Daizaburo was noted for his bijinga (paintings of beautiful women),
and gracefully suggests Monets Olympia in
repose on a chaise with his model, Irie Takato, a popular film star of the day. Here the
woman is displayed as refined ornament, while in other prints and paintings in the show,
the modern girl is rendered in a more Westernized flashy style of sex object, such as the
woodblock print Tipsy by Kobayakawa Kiyoshi.
Within Taisho Chic is an entire sub-collection of the very popular and
very Japanese medium of the kimono. These range from strikingly bold abstract jazz
patterns to traditional Japanese flower motifs, blown up in size and simplified in detail
to express the aesthetic of advertising design. Other objects in the exhibition include
woodblock prints, scroll paintings, folding screens, textiles, and decorative arts,
including hibachis, candle stands, a hand-held fan, and cups and saucers.
September 19, 2005 - Les Wright