Search results

From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
  • ...tualized element of elite banquets, tea practice became formalized into an art in the late 16th century (the [[Azuchi-Momoyama period]]), and came to be p ...e the Meiji period formalization of tea as a "national" and "traditional" "art."<ref>Corbett, 13.</ref>
    12 KB (1,935 words) - 00:25, 5 March 2018
  • ...strong Imperial association throughout its history, much surrounding that association today is a product of [[State Shinto]] as constructed in the [[Meiji period ...eliefs associated with them, were abolished in the Meiji period, and Ise's association with the Imperial lineage became emphasized, with Imperial visits to the Sh
    13 KB (2,088 words) - 04:10, 14 April 2022
  • ...nd [[1595]].<ref>Andrew Tsubaki, "The Performing Arts of Sixteenth-Century Japan: A Prelude to Kabuki," ''Educational Theatre Journal'' 29:3 (1977), 304.</r ...raised up as a celebrated example of traditional Japanese music, and that Japan instead turned away from these traditions and embraced Western classical mu
    11 KB (1,655 words) - 20:02, 5 March 2018
  • ...] Period, covers the years during which the [[Ashikaga Bakufu]] controlled Japan. It runs from around [[1333]] (some say [[1336]]) until [[1573]]. The era ...murai or court noble in a different meeting space, engaging in a different art, with different companions, intermingling and moving about, and thus formin
    9 KB (1,419 words) - 20:45, 28 November 2014
  • ...setting the stage for profoundly negative Korean attitudes & views towards Japan down to the present day. ...ther powers, in order to keep Korea available for trade and relations with Japan. This would remain a prominent theme in Japanese attitudes and actions towa
    13 KB (1,939 words) - 16:34, 27 March 2018
  • ...story of the form (i.e. it being an older, more traditional form), and the association of scrolls as the format of imported Buddhist knowledge, scrolls came to of ...ening less completely (where pages are pasted). Though extensively used in Japan to a certain extent, this method of binding was more common in China.
    16 KB (2,557 words) - 01:34, 29 April 2018
  • ...rciful Mother") by [[Kano Hogai|Kanô Hôgai]], [[1883]]. [[Freer Gallery of Art]].]] ''Nihonga'' (lit. "Japan pictures" or "Japanese painting") is a term applied broadly to Japanese pai
    35 KB (5,390 words) - 23:46, 25 July 2016
  • ...wano collections.<ref>''Sanshin no chikara'', Okinawa Prefectural Museum & Art Museum (2013), 75.</ref> ...f ''uzagaku'' ever came to be performed regularly or expertly by anyone in Japan, it was almost certainly only in Kagoshima.
    16 KB (2,290 words) - 04:35, 22 April 2020
  • ...AAS Roundtable, "Who Moved My Masterpiece?...Cultural Heritage of Kyoto," Association for Asian Studies annual conference, San Diego, March 23 2013.</ref> ...f Art<ref>While the Freer piece seen here is permanently housed outside of Japan, and is therefore not an Important Cultural Property, an earlier version of
    17 KB (2,392 words) - 20:17, 24 June 2022
  • ...ing; image from exhibition "Ainu Treasures: A Living Tradition in Northern Japan," East-West Center Gallery, Honolulu, Spring 2013]] The Ainu are an indigenous people of Japan, mainly associated with [[Hokkaido|Hokkaidô]], though as late as the [[Edo
    32 KB (5,052 words) - 04:38, 28 July 2022
  • ...ons also had a strong influence upon women's fashions in Edo, and Tokugawa Japan more broadly. ..., University of California Press (2012), 52.; Christine Guth, ''Art of Edo Japan'', Yale University Press (1996), 92.</ref>
    20 KB (3,089 words) - 00:03, 9 July 2016
  • ...and popular music, and has gained popularity in recent decades in mainland Japan as well. ...ities to systems of notation used for traditional instruments in China and Japan, but bears no resemblance to standard Western staff notation.
    25 KB (3,931 words) - 09:12, 21 April 2020
  • ...), 57.; also, presentation by Katayama Kurôemon X, at "Master Artists from Japan: Living Traditions," University of California at Santa Barbara, 27 January ...ormed today.<ref>Andrew Tsubaki, "The Performing Arts of Sixteenth-Century Japan: A Prelude to Kabuki," ''Educational Theatre Journal'' 29:3 (1977), 300.</r
    22 KB (3,481 words) - 00:34, 26 June 2019
  • ...me=guth/> The grand ''tenshukaku'' (tower keep), the tallest ever built in Japan at 58 meters high & five stories high from exterior view, was begun in [[16 ...no goten – Edojō shōhekiga no shitae'' 将軍の御殿-江戸城障壁画の下絵-, Nagoya: Tokugawa Art Museum (1988), 114-115.</ref>
    33 KB (4,945 words) - 15:47, 1 February 2022
  • ...rve as the standard model for the shape or form of coins in both China and Japan for many centuries. Recent discoveries since the 1990s, however, have unear ...n'' of coins through the Edo period.<ref>Kobata. pp98-99.</ref> The direct association of goods, especially rice, with value, would continue through the mid-19th
    27 KB (4,269 words) - 01:52, 18 November 2019
  • ...ai''.<ref>Timothy Clark, "Edo Kabuki in the 1780s," ''The Actor's Image'', Art Institute of Chicago (1994), 34.</ref> Productions went on all day, typical ...e=clark27>Timothy Clark, "Edo Kabuki in the 1780s," ''The Actor's Image'', Art Institute of Chicago (1994), 27, 36-38.</ref>
    43 KB (6,903 words) - 00:03, 26 June 2020

View (previous 20 | next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)