Where the Dragons Are|[Special Feature] Daybreak of Chinese Style Calligraphy in Premodern Japan: Hayashi Razan and His Community
- Keio Museum Commons (East Annex, Keio University Mita Campus)
- Keio Museum Commons
- Free
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2024/01/10~2024/02/09
11:00–18:00
Closed on Saturdays and Sundays
Special opening on Saturday,: January 20 and February 3
Temporary Closing day: Monday, January 22 and Monday, February 5
- Free
The Chinese zodiac sign for 2024 is the dragon, the only fictional inhabitant of the zodiac. Dragons have long been represented in Eastern and Western artifacts in various ways – controlling nature, hiding in secret locations, acting as guardians, fighting, and much more. To start the New Year, this exhibition brings together dragons from across the collections of Keio University and takes you on a journey to the home of these mythical animals in their diverse forms.
Special Feature: Daybreak of Chinese Style Calligraphy in Premodern Japan: Hayashi Razan and his Community, from the Century Akao Collection
As the times change, culture also changes. Calligraphy is no exception. In the world of Chinese poetry and writing in Japan during the shift from the Middle Ages to the early modern period, the dominant role shifted from Zen monks, who were the leaders of Gozan literature, to scholars of Chinese classics and kanshi poets who both served the shogunate and ruling class. Early modern Chinese style calligraphy, generally known as Karayo, evolved in the late 17th century with the arrival of Huangbo priests and calligraphy handbooks from the Ming dynasty. This special feature focuses on the first half of the 17th century, the eve of Karayo, and showcases calligraphy by the leaders of the new Chinese studies and Chinese poetry, particularly Hayashi Razan and his contemporaries.
Organized by Keio Museum Commons / Keio Institute of Oriental Classics (Shido Bunko)
Cooperation by the Department of Aesthetics and Science of Arts, Keio University Faculty of Letters / Department of Archaeology and Ethnology, Keio University Faculty of Letters / Fukuzawa Memorial Center for Modern Japanese Studies, Keio University / Historical Documents Room, Keio University Faculty of Letters (Komonjoshitsu) / Mita Media Center (Keio University Library) / Keio University Art Center / Keio University Hiyoshi Media Center (Hiyoshi Library) / Keio University Shinanomachi Media Center (Kitasato Memorial Medical Library)
Cooperation by the Department of Aesthetics and Science of Arts, Keio University Faculty of Letters / Department of Archaeology and Ethnology, Keio University Faculty of Letters / Fukuzawa Memorial Center for Modern Japanese Studies, Keio University / Historical Documents Room, Keio University Faculty of Letters (Komonjoshitsu) / Mita Media Center (Keio University Library) / Keio University Art Center / Keio University Hiyoshi Media Center (Hiyoshi Library) / Keio University Shinanomachi Media Center (Kitasato Memorial Medical Library)
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