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Spontaneity in Japanese Art and Culture (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,451
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Spontaneity in Japanese Art and Culture (Hardcover)
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This book is the culmination of many years of research on Japanese
aesthetics by David and Michiko Young, authors of The Art of the
Japanese Garden and The Art of Japanese Architecture (Tuttle
Publishing). The book contains more than 200 color photographs on a
variety of topics pertaining to Japanese art and culture. There are
two major aesthetic traditions in Japan --a Restrained Tradition
and an Exuberant Tradition. In phenomena as diverse as art,
architecture, gardens, clothing, the objects people use and
interior decor, the influence of both traditions can be seen.
Instead of competing with each other, these two traditions are
opposite ends of a continuum on which people move back and forth
between restraint and exuberance in the course of their daily
lives, depending upon the circumstances. This movement is not
arbitrary but governed by principles that go to the core of
Japanese culture. The goal of this book is to provide a better
understanding of these basic principles. An important theme
throughout the book is that Japan is a highly structured society in
which people value but seldom have the opportunity to express
spontaneity in art and everyday life. True spontaneity is achieved
only when an art form is totally mastered so that it flows freely
without thought. This kind of spontaneity is seen in children's
art, much of the art of Zen Buddhism or absorption in a hobby,
sport or music. Most of the time, individuals seek escape from the
restrictions of everyday life in fantasy, as evidenced by the
popularity of manga and the great diversity of after-hours
entertainment in Japan. Sometimes, however, they turn to the values
incorporated in the concept of SHIBUSA, an important aesthetic
concept in Japan. SHIBUSA attempts to find a compromise between
spontaneity and a high level of taste. SHIBUI aesthetics, which
favor values such as austerity, asymmetry and subdued colors, is
toward the restrained end of the Restraint-Exuberance Continuum. At
the same time, however, it represents what we have called
"spontaneity of effect," creating an atmosphere that appears to be
relaxed and spontaneous, even if it is not truly spontaneous. We
believe that the concept of SHIBUSA is a major contribution of
Japan to the rest of the world.
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