Showing posts with label #WashingtonDC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #WashingtonDC. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Historic Exhibition Of Animals In Japanese Art Opens May 2019 At The National Gallery Of Art In Washington, DC.

Historic Exhibition of 16 Centuries of Animals in Japanese Art Will Showcase Masterpieces That Rarely Leave Japan
Unknown Artist, Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities, Nanboku-chō period, 14th century, bronze, Hosomi Museum
Unknown Artist, Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities, Nanboku-chō period, 14th century, bronze, Hosomi Museum
Washington, DC—Artworks representing animals—real or imaginary, religious or secular—span the full breadth and splendor of Japanese artistic production. Today, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, announced The Life of Animals in Japanese Art, the first exhibition devoted to the subject, covering 16 centuries (from the sixth century to the present day) and a wide variety of media—sculpture, painting, lacquerwork, ceramics, metalwork, textile, and the woodblock print. On view from May 5 through July 28, 2019, the exhibition will feature 315 works, drawn from 66 Japanese and 30 American public and private collections. The artists represented range from Sesson Shūkei, Itō Jakuchū, Soga Shōhaku, Katsushika Hokusai, Utagawa Kuniyoshi, to Okamoto Tarō, Kusama Yayoi, Issey Miyake, Nara Yoshitomo, and Murakami Takashi.
Many of the nearly 180 works traveling from Japan are masterpieces that rarely—if ever—leave the country, including seven designated as an Important Cultural Property by the Japanese government. Three of the registered artworks are from the Tokyo National Museum: the six-foot-tall Monju Bosatsu Seated on a Lion, with Standing Attendants (1273) by the Buddhist sculptor Kōen; the intricately carved wood Buddhist sculpture Aged Monkey (1893) by Takamura Kōun; and the Footed Bowl with Applied Crabs (19th century) by Miyagawa Kōzan I. Two are on loan from the Nara National Museum: a hanging scroll, Sword with Kurikara Dragon and Two Child Acolytes (13th century); and a Buddhist hanging scroll, Fugen Enmei (13th century). Finally, the wood sculpture Fugen's Elephant(13th century) is on loan from a private collection, and a spectacular bronze, Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities (14th century), is on loan from the Hosomi Museum, Kyoto.
This historic exhibition is co-organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Japan Foundation, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), with special cooperation from the Tokyo National Museum, and curated by Robert T. Singer, curator and department head, Japanese art, LACMA, and Masatomo Kawai, director, Chiba City Museum of Art, in consultation with a team of esteemed historians of Japanese art. LACMA is presenting an abbreviated version of the exhibition, titled Every Living Thing: Animals in Japanese Art from September 8 through December 8, 2019. The Gallery's presentation of the exhibition, covering 18,000 square feet in the East Building Concourse, is organized into thematic sections that explore the various roles animals have played in the art of Japan. A fully illustrated catalog is being published in association with Princeton University Press.
"The Gallery is honored to partner with the Japan Foundation and LACMA to present the first exhibition to consider the representation of animals across the history of Japanese art," said Earl A. Powell III, director, National Gallery of Art. "It is a privilege to work with the Japan Foundation to share these Japanese masterpieces with American audiences, and we are grateful to the Foundation for making this incredible group of loans possible. As the largest single Japanese lender, the Tokyo National Museum has also played a significant role in this exhibition and we are pleased to welcome nearly 30 works from the Museum's unparalleled collection."
"The Japan Foundation creates global opportunities to foster friendship, trust, and mutual understanding through culture, language, and dialogue, to cultivate friendship and ties between Japan and the world. We believe this is a basis for building a truly peaceful and rich world," said Hiroyasu Ando, president, the Japan Foundation. "To achieve this mission, the Japan Foundation has organized numerous cultural events around the world and in the U.S. Among them, the upcoming exhibition of The Life of Animals in Japanese Art is one of the most ambitious and creative projects, and will display artworks of high quality for everyone's enjoyment. One may call these works of art—created through long, close interactions between animals and Japanese people over 1,500 years—a gift from humans to animals. I very much look forward to sharing this gift with our American friends."
Exhibition Support
The exhibition is made possible through the generous support of the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation. Additional funding is provided by The Exhibition Circle of the National Gallery of Art.
Exhibition Organization and Curators
The exhibition is co-organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, the Japan Foundation, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, with special cooperation from the Tokyo National Museum.
The exhibition's curators Robert T. Singer, curator and department head, Japanese art, LACMA, and Masatomo Kawai, director, Chiba City Museum of Art, worked in consultation with a team of esteemed historians of Japanese art: Ryusuke Asami, chief curator sculpture, Tokyo National Museum; Masaaki Arakawa, professor, Gakushuin University; Hiroyuki Kano, former professor, Doshisha University; Mika Kuraya, chief curator, Museum of Modern Art, Toyko; Yasuyuki Sasaki, curator, Suntory Museum of Art; Tomoko Matsuo, curator, Chiba City Museum of Art; Nobuhiko Maruyama, professor, Musashi University; and Hiroshi Ikeda, honorary researcher, Toyko National Museum.
Exhibition Dates
National Gallery of Art, Washington, May 5–July 28, 2019
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, September 8–December 8, 2019
Exhibition Highlights
The Life of Animals in Japanese Art takes an expansive look at the representation of animals in a variety of art forms including painted screens, hanging scrolls, woodblock prints, netsuke, ceramic plates, kimono, and samurai helmets. The selection portrays all types of creatures—from foxes and frogs, snakes and sparrows, to mythical animals such as dragons, phoenixes, and kappa river sprites. To explore the many roles animals have played in Japanese culture, objects are divided into eight sections: Ancient Japan;The Japanese Zodiac; Religion: Buddhism, Zen, Shinto; Myth and Folklore; The World of the Samurai; The Study of Nature; The Natural World: Creatures on Land, in the Air, and in Rivers and Seas; and The World of Leisure.
Since antiquity, animals have held spiritual and symbolic significance in Japanese culture, as evidenced by haniwa, ancient clay sculptures that were placed around gravesites, possibly to protect the dead in the afterlife. A sixth-century haniwahorse on loan from LACMA—standing nearly four feet tall—is one of the largest known sculptures of this animal from the period. In Buddhism, Shinto, and Zen, artworks depicting animals were commonly given places of prominence in temples and shrines according to the creatures' divine duties. For instance, Shinto deer were revered as messengers to—or even stand-ins for—the gods, as illustrated by the 15th-century Kasuga Deer Mandala, on loan from the Art Institute of Chicago.
The allegorical power of animals is not limited to the spiritual realm; they carry many meanings in secular works of art as well. Objects portraying the Japanese zodiac animals individually were commonly collected as symbols of an individual's identity. Even rarer are works that depict all 12 animals of the zodiac together. The exhibition includes several examples: a set of 19th-century woodblock prints by Utagawa Kuniyoshi on loan from the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, a finely embroidered 19th-century Kosode with the Twelve Zodiac Animals on loan from the National Museum of Japanese History, and a remarkable mid-to-late-19th-century netsuke by Kaigyokusai Masatsugu on loan from LACMA, with all 12 zodiac animals intertwined in one small piece of carved ivory.
Animals were popularly described in myth and folklore in anthropomorphic terms, often as a means of disguising social critiques. One of the most well-known works in the exhibition is a scene from the handscroll Frolicking Animals (12th-13th century), on loan from the collection of Robin B. Martin, courtesy of the Brooklyn Museum. Long attributed to the Buddhist monk Toba Sōjō, the scene depicts monkeys, a rabbit, and a deer as protagonists in a thinly veiled satire of priests. Humans also adopted the form of, or decorated themselves with, animals for their symbolic energy. Samurai commonly wore armor decorated with dragons or helmets in the shapes of rabbit ears, deer antlers, or the mythological shachihoko, which has the head of a tiger and body of a carp.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, artists developed an interest in the study of the natural world and thus in drawing individual animals directly from life. Inspiration for most images of animals had previously come from earlier examples in art. Whereas Itō Jakuchū painted with lifelike detail every barb in every vane of a feather in Pair of Cranes and Morning Sun(c. 1755–1756), on loan from the Tekisuiken Memorial Foundation of Culture, while Utagawa Hiroshige carved every scale of a seabream in A Shoal of Fishes, his 19th-century woodblock print series on loan from the Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum. Many artists depicted numerous animals within a single species in order to convey their auspicious meanings. An elaborate formal kimono like the 19th-century Uchikake with Phoenix and Birds, on loan from the Kyoto National Museum, would have brought its wearer good luck, while giving someone a hanging scroll like One Hundred Rabbits (1784) by Maruyama Ōkyo, on loan from a private collection in Japan, conveyed a wish for prosperity and plenitude.
Contemporary artworks spread throughout the exhibition demonstrate the influence of traditional representations of animals on the work of living Japanese artists. The medieval Deer Bearing Symbols of the Kasuga Deities is installed alongside Kōhei Nawa's PixCell-Bambi 14 (2015), while Kusama Yayoi's polka-dotted three-dimensional dogs are in conversation with haniwa animals, illustrating the similarities in their forms and expressions. On loan from the Broad Art Foundation, Murakami Takashi's 82-foot-long vibrant painting In the Land of the Dead, Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow (2014) was created in response to the 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Murakami drew inspiration from a series of scrolls on the 500 arhats, Buddhists who achieved enlightenment, created by Kanō Kazunobu over a ten-year period that included the 1855 Edo earthquake. For his painting, Murakami embellished the background, arhats, and animals such as the shachihokowith his signature flourish and vibrant palette. Many of the works exhibited employ distinctly contemporary techniques to depict animals. Whimsical creations by designer Issey Miyake transform wearers into a starfish, a monkey, or a swallow. In a digital work, Chrysanthemum Tiger (2017), from the Tokyo-based collective teamLab's Fleeting Flower series, flowers and petals coalesce to form a moving image of a tiger which then dissolves, scatters, and takes shape again.
Exhibition Catalog
Published by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, in association with Princeton University Press, a richly illustrated catalog features contributions by the exhibition's curators and an international team of esteemed experts in Japanese art. Included are essays by scholars Barbara Rossetti Ambros, department chair, religious studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Thomas Hare, William Sauter LaPorte '28 Professor in Regional Studies and professor of comparative literature, Princeton University; and Federico Marcon, associate professor of East Asian studies and history, Princeton University. With 425 illustrations and some 400 pages, the catalog will be available in Spring 2019 at shop.nga.gov, or by calling (800) 697-9350 or (202) 842-6002; faxing (202) 789-3047; or emailing mailorder@nga.gov.
The exhibition catalog is made possible through the generous support of the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation. Additional funding for the catalog is provided by Janice Holland.
Related Programs
Lecture
Introduction to the ExhibitionThe Life of Animals in Japanese Art
May 5, noon
East Building Auditorium
Robert T. Singer, curator and department head, Japanese art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and chief curator of The Life of Animals in Japanese Art
Public Symposium
The Role and Representations of Animals in Japanese Art and Culture
June 7, 10:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
East Building Auditorium
Moderated by Robert T. Singer, with illustrated lectures by noted scholars, including Barbara Rossetti Ambros, department chair, religious studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Rory Browne, director of the academic advising center and associate dean of Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences, Boston College; R. Keller Kimbrough, professor of Japanese, department of Asian languages and civilizations, University of Colorado, Boulder; Federico Marcon, Associate Professor of East Asian Studies and History, Princeton University; Daniel McKee, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Asian Studies, Cornell University; and Miwako Tezuka, consulting curator, Reversible DestinyFoundation.
Concert
Yumi Kurosawa, koto
With special guests Anubrata Chatterjee, tabla, and Virgil Gadsen, dancer
May 19, 3:30 p.m.
West Building, West Garden Court
This performance brings together the elements of Japan's spiritual philosophy and the importance of the animal world, as represented in literature, art, dance, and music. To illustrate the soundscape of our story, the koto's melodic timbre recalls Japan's history with chant, the tabla reminds us of the heartbeat, and the featured element of dance echoes the natural world of movement.
Films
The Life of Animals in Japanese Cinema
Summer 2019
Japanese filmmaking has over the years made rich use of animal forms as symbol and object, offering varied meanings and observations about the natural world. This series of approximately 30 films—narrative features, documentaries, and shorts, both contemporary and classic—includes Hachi: A Dog's TaleGodzilla (1954 original), What the Snow BringsPom PokoPrincess Raccoon, Ghost Cat of Arima PalaceSamurai CatMadadayoThe Hidden FortressRanI Am a Cat, and Song of the Horse. Animations by Koji Yamamura and Osamu Tezuka, Kihachirō Kawamoto puppet shorts, plus two productions from the famed Shochiku series Cinema Kabuki—Triple Lion Dance (Renjishi) and The Heron Maiden—are also featured.
The Japan Foundation
To cultivate friendship and ties between Japan and the world, the Japan Foundation creates global opportunities to foster friendship, trust, and mutual understanding through culture, language, and dialogue. The Japan Foundation was established in October 1972 as a special legal entity supervised by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In October 2003, it was reorganized as an independent administrative institution. Based on a government endowment of 78 billion yen, the activities of the Japan Foundation are financed by annual government subsidies, investment revenue, and donations from the private sector.

General Information
The National Gallery of Art and its Sculpture Garden are at all times free to the public. They are located on the National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets at Constitution Avenue NW, and are open Monday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The Gallery is closed on December 25 and January 1. For information call (202) 737-4215 or visit the Gallery's Web site at www.nga.gov. Follow the Gallery on Facebook at www.facebook.com/NationalGalleryofArt, Twitter at www.twitter.com/ngadc, and Instagram at http://instagram.com/ngadc.

Monday, May 21, 2018

The 100 Best U.S. Summer Travel destinations: Washington DC leading





Washington DC is the number one, Orlando the number two and Austin number three U.S. Travel Destination for the Summer on a scale from 1 to 100. The number 100 is Santa Rosa, California. This is according to a recent study released by Wallethub.
According to the study comparing the best vs. worst:
  • The average flight to a popular summer destination costs $319, lasts 3 hours and 57 minutes and has 0.4 connections.
  • The Las Vegas metro area is the most attractive destination on the West Coast and the Washington D.C. metro area on the East Coast.
  • Florida and Texas are home to the top summer destinations in the U.S., each with at least two metro areas in the top 15. Oppositely,   Pennsylvania has one of the largest number of most unpopular summer destinations.
  • The Oklahoma metro area has the lowest nightly rate for a three-star hotel room, $43, which is five times less expensive than in New Orleans, the metro area with the highest at $214.

Compared with other rankings that focus on each destination’s scenic quality, this report focuses primarily on the cost and convenience of traveling to each location as well as its affordability. However, it does take into account the number of attractions and variety of activities in each destination to ensure visitors will stay busy and entertained throughout the trip.
Source: WalletHub

Rank
(1=Best)
Destination (Metro Area)Total Score‘Travel Costs & Hassles’ Rank‘Local Costs’ Rank‘Attractions’ Rank‘Weather’ Rank‘Activities’ Rank‘Safety’ Rank
1Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV Metro Area67.34984819146
2Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL Metro Area67.252314962267
3Austin-Round Rock, TX Metro Area66.37193613211832
4Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI Metro Area66.18886455338
5Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA Metro Area65.93105516151058
6Cincinnati, OH-KY-IN Metro Area64.8513436481625
7Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX Metro Area64.5631531413437
8Oklahoma City, OK Metro Area62.8011148177969
9Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, NV Metro Area62.632019777791
10Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX Metro Area62.367923502977
11New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA Metro Area62.263393266110
12Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA Metro Area62.174682149951
13Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL Metro Area62.12284328401529
14St. Louis, MO-IL Metro Area62.06215025122457
15Salt Lake City, UT Metro Area61.21126427112583
16Richmond, VA Metro Area60.93662135322318
17San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX Metro Area60.5726618384589
18Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metro Area60.26358312421240
19Knoxville, TN Metro Area59.6664250365062
20Pittsburgh, PA Metro Area59.4716544771208
21Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO Metro Area59.4266720701953
22Columbus, OH Metro Area59.30222574205631
23Omaha-Council Bluffs, NE-IA Metro Area59.2725777443941
24Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI Metro Area59.2522066565161
25Charleston-North Charleston, SC Metro Area58.8638725333656
26Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI Metro Area58.8247434751727
27Chattanooga, TN-GA Metro Area58.58561838147776
28San Diego-Carlsbad, CA Metro Area58.5627921080420
29Louisville/Jefferson County, KY-IN Metro Area58.56601332165366
30Raleigh, NC Metro Area58.42294546225259
31El Paso, TX Metro Area58.33431086108623
32Jacksonville, FL Metro Area57.95481626612765
33Boise, ID Metro Area57.8575243930625
34Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL Metro Area57.8139771467571
35Albuquerque, NM Metro Area57.714032455499
36Kansas City, MO-KS Metro Area56.9955651376770
37Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD Metro Area56.93155330434184
38Cleveland-Elyria, OH Metro Area56.91148141513735
39Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN Metro Area56.5049762164273
40Tulsa, OK Metro Area56.41421260186086
41Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson, IN Metro Area56.03133144525781
42Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA Metro Area56.0337856901130
43Cape Coral-Fort Myers, FL Metro Area55.82514075644416
44Sacramento–Roseville–Arden-Arcade, CA Metro Area55.78587933312842
45Tucson, AZ Metro Area55.70701717573088
46Grand Rapids-Wyoming, MI Metro Area55.65363559766912
47Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR Metro Area55.456254998898
48Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH Metro Area55.3531961173267
49Madison, WI Metro Area54.8434655787224
50Dayton, OH Metro Area54.75302689658339
51Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC Metro Area54.61243740235896
52Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ Metro Area54.4117821924760
53Memphis, TN-MS-AR Metro Area54.25451145138797
54Birmingham-Hoover, AL Metro Area53.58412776248090
55Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC Metro Area53.19578755263144
56Jackson, MS Metro Area52.7482389289625
57Columbia, SC Metro Area52.66722864287385
58Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI Metro Area52.26185958793879
59Greensboro-High Point, NC Metro Area52.05614283356555
60Des Moines-West Des Moines, IA Metro Area51.77553295539433
61Springfield, MO Metro Area51.76596061278294
62Augusta-Richmond County, GA-SC Metro Area51.54812988299548
63Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR-MO Metro Area51.44543091257893
64Pensacola-Ferry Pass-Brent, FL Metro Area51.29506162N/A3254
65Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ Metro Area50.91734772606663
66Lexington-Fayette, KY Metro Area50.63744152548447
67Rochester, NY Metro Area50.18637356854614
68New Orleans-Metairie, LA Metro Area50.16789115392174
69Lafayette, LA Metro Area50.12803373479750
70Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA Metro Area49.9083718077645
71Akron, OH Metro Area49.306822937410024
72Buffalo-Cheektowaga-Niagara Falls, NY Metro Area49.28657042824343
73Syracuse, NY Metro Area49.18716967847511
74Colorado Springs, CO Metro Area48.51696837787252
75Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT Metro Area48.19846285689213
76Greenville-Anderson-Mauldin, SC Metro Area47.94475754N/A3595
77Fresno, CA Metro Area47.8192527129380
78Wichita, KS Metro Area47.745223793390100
79Providence-Warwick, RI-MA Metro Area47.61678963725517
80Honolulu, HI Metro Area47.3198100191646
81Baton Rouge, LA Metro Area47.17945169464878
82San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA Metro Area47.03449443884921
83Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, FL Metro Area46.97768094454064
84San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, CA Metro Area46.703299395872
85Corpus Christi, TX Metro Area46.36876668346492
86Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA Metro Area45.4553975941368
87McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX Metro Area45.1096496589834
88Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, FL Metro Area44.837958100595949
89Scranton–Wilkes-Barre–Hazleton, PA Metro Area44.77914897816322
90Harrisburg-Carlisle, PA Metro Area44.70937570N/A703
91Toledo, OH Metro Area44.49894484638975
92Lansing-East Lansing, MI Metro Area44.39854690829936
93Portland-South Portland, ME Metro Area44.3077952993331
94Albany-Schenectady-Troy, NY Metro Area44.15907878868115
95Spokane-Spokane Valley, WA Metro Area43.14863965897482
96Bakersfield, CA Metro Area41.5199638749187
97Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT Metro Area39.14100908169712
98North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, FL Metro Area37.63884999N/A6128
99Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA Metro Area33.8495888295859
100Santa Rosa, CA Metro Area28.01979898916819


Source: Wallet Hub