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Full-Text Articles in Asian Art and Architecture

Portugal, Jesuits, And Japan: Spiritual Beliefs And Earthly Goods, Victoria Weston Dec 2012

Portugal, Jesuits, And Japan: Spiritual Beliefs And Earthly Goods, Victoria Weston

Victoria Weston

This exhibition catalogue brings together an international group of scholars addressing various topics related to Nanban trade screens and the objects and ideas represented in them. The catalogue accompanied the exhibition of the same title at the McMullen Museum, Boston College. Weston authored the Introduction and an essay on trade screens in the show.


Copying The Master And Stealing His Secrets: Talent And Training In Japanese Painting, Victoria Weston Dec 2002

Copying The Master And Stealing His Secrets: Talent And Training In Japanese Painting, Victoria Weston

Victoria Weston

This edited volume explores the roles of innate talent and art studio/school training as developed in the Kano school of painters. The chapters are case studies of particular painters and training practices. Weston is author of "Institutionalizing Talent and the Kano Legacy at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts, 1889-1893," co-author with Martha McClintock of "Okuhara Seiko: A Case of Funpon Training in Late Edo Literati Painting," and co-author with Brenda Jordan of the Introduction.


East Meets West: Isabella Stewart Gardner And Okakura Kakuzō, Victoria Weston Dec 1992

East Meets West: Isabella Stewart Gardner And Okakura Kakuzō, Victoria Weston

Victoria Weston

This exhibition catalogue accompanied the exhibition of the same name shown at the Gardner Museum in 1993. The exhibition featured the fusuma and folding screen sets owned by the Gardner of generally seventeenth century Kano authorship. The catalogue essay discusses the relationship between Mrs. Gardner and Japanese art critic Okakura Kakuzō during the years 1904 to 1913 and the development of the Chinese Room. The painting "Two Dragons Contending for the Moon" by Yokoyama Taikan (ca. 1904/5) and his quick sketch inside the cover of Mrs. Gardner's guest book (discovered and identified by Weston) were included in the exhibition.