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Tokugawa Art and Culture
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Tokugawa Art and Culture

Feb 06, 2022

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Page 1: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Tokugawa Art and Culture

Page 2: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Ukiyo-e = “Pictures of the floating world” (woodblock prints)

Page 3: Tokugawa Art and Culture

“Mt. Fuji on a Clear Day”(aka Red Fuji) by Hokusai (1760-1849)

Page 4: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Prints by Kitagawa Utamaro (1753-1806) ; the portrait on the left is a domestic scene, the one on

the right is of a bijinga (beautiful person)

Page 5: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Noh Theater -Noh is the oldest of Japan’s theatrical arts.

-It includes music, dance, and sculpture as well as drama.

-It is more restrained and less extroverted than Kabuki, Japan’s other major theatrical art.

-Actors wear masks and perform on a simple stage typically resembling a Shinto shrine, often with a figure representing a pine tree in the background.

Page 6: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Noh Theater makes use of music also

Page 7: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Kabuki plays, in contrast, are more extravagant, with many dances and with actors wearing make-up rather

than masks

Page 8: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Kabuki actor

Page 9: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Sumo

Page 10: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Tea Ceremony = chado

Page 11: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Ikebana = Japanese art of flower arrangement (kado)

Page 12: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Poetry (haiku esp.) On the Road to Nara (by Matsuo Basho)

Oh, these Spring Days! A nameless little mountain, Wrapped in morning hazel.

Page 13: Tokugawa Art and Culture

Japanese calligraphy (shodo)