Description

Book Synopsis
In May 1950 Isamu Noguchi (190488) returned to Japan for his first visit in 20 years. He was, Noguchi said, seeking models for evolving the relationship between sculpture and societyhaving emerged from the war years with a profound desire to reorient his work toward some purposeful social end. The artist Saburo Hasegawa (190657) was a key figure for Noguchi during this period, making introductions to Japanese artists, philosophies, and material culture. Hasegawa, who had mingled with the European avant-garde during time spent as a painter in Paris in the 1930s, was, like Noguchi, seeking an artistic hybridity. By the time Hasegawa and Noguchi met, both had been thinking deeply about the balance between tradition and modernity, and indigenous and foreign influences, in the development of traditional cultures for some time. The predicate of their intense friendship was a thorough exploration of traditional Japanese culture within the context of seeking what Noguchi termed an innocent synthesis that must rise from the embers of the past. Changing and Unchanging Things is an account of how their joint exploration of traditional Japanese culture influenced their contemporary and subsequent work. The 40 masterpieces in the exhibitionby turns elegiac, assured, ambivalent, anguished, euphoric, and resignedare organized into the major overlapping subjects of their attention: the landscapes of Japan, the abstracted human figure, the fragmentation of matter in the atomic age, and Japan's traditional art forms. Published in association with The Noguchi Museum. Exhibition dates: Yokohama Museum of Art, Japan: January 12March 21, 2019 The Noguchi Museum, New York: May 1July 14, 2019 Asian Art Museum, San Francisco: September 27December 8, 2019

Trade Review
"Will undoubtedly be an important reference for future studies on Hasegawa, Noguchi, and postwar art by Japanologists and non-Japanologists alike." * Journal of Japanese Studies *

Table of Contents
FOREWORD JENNY DIXON

INTRODUCTION Changing and Unchanging Things: Noguchi and Hasegawa in Postwar Japan DAKIN HART AND MARK DEAN JOHNSON

ONE Modernist Passions for “Old Japan:” Saburo Hasegawa and Isamu Noguchi in 1950 BERT WINTHER-TAMAKI

TWO “Accumulated Impressions”: A Photographic Travelogue of Noguchi and Hasegawa in Japan MATTHEW KIRSCH

THREE Regretting the Future: Noguchi, and Hasegawa Consider the Direction of Postwar Japanese Art KOICHI KAWASAKI

FOUR Isamu Noguchi’s Memorial to the Dead of Hiroshima: The Monument that Never Was and an Artistic Vision Shared with Saburo Hasegawa NAOAKI NAKAMURA

FIVE Saburo Hasegawa in America: A Wide Open Road MARK DEAN JOHNSON

SIX True Development of an Old Tradition: Isamu Noguchi’s Work in the 1950s DAKIN HART

SEVEN Toward Abstraction: Saburo Hasegawa’s Exploration of the Photogram YASUFUMI NAKAMORI

PLATES Saburo Hasegawa and Isamu Noguchi

PRIMARY SOURCES Remembrance of Saburo Hasegawa ISAMU NOGUCHI

Noguchi in Japan SABURO HASEGAWA

CHRONOLOGY Isamu Noguchi and Saburo Hasegawa: 1904–April 1959 MATTHEW KIRSCH

Japanese Translations
Contributors
Photography credits

Changing and Unchanging Things

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    A Hardback by Dakin Hart, Mark Dean Johnson, Matthew Kirsch

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 15/03/2019
      ISBN13: 9780520298224, 978-0520298224
      ISBN10: 0520298225

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In May 1950 Isamu Noguchi (190488) returned to Japan for his first visit in 20 years. He was, Noguchi said, seeking models for evolving the relationship between sculpture and societyhaving emerged from the war years with a profound desire to reorient his work toward some purposeful social end. The artist Saburo Hasegawa (190657) was a key figure for Noguchi during this period, making introductions to Japanese artists, philosophies, and material culture. Hasegawa, who had mingled with the European avant-garde during time spent as a painter in Paris in the 1930s, was, like Noguchi, seeking an artistic hybridity. By the time Hasegawa and Noguchi met, both had been thinking deeply about the balance between tradition and modernity, and indigenous and foreign influences, in the development of traditional cultures for some time. The predicate of their intense friendship was a thorough exploration of traditional Japanese culture within the context of seeking what Noguchi termed an innocent synthesis that must rise from the embers of the past. Changing and Unchanging Things is an account of how their joint exploration of traditional Japanese culture influenced their contemporary and subsequent work. The 40 masterpieces in the exhibitionby turns elegiac, assured, ambivalent, anguished, euphoric, and resignedare organized into the major overlapping subjects of their attention: the landscapes of Japan, the abstracted human figure, the fragmentation of matter in the atomic age, and Japan's traditional art forms. Published in association with The Noguchi Museum. Exhibition dates: Yokohama Museum of Art, Japan: January 12March 21, 2019 The Noguchi Museum, New York: May 1July 14, 2019 Asian Art Museum, San Francisco: September 27December 8, 2019

      Trade Review
      "Will undoubtedly be an important reference for future studies on Hasegawa, Noguchi, and postwar art by Japanologists and non-Japanologists alike." * Journal of Japanese Studies *

      Table of Contents
      FOREWORD JENNY DIXON

      INTRODUCTION Changing and Unchanging Things: Noguchi and Hasegawa in Postwar Japan DAKIN HART AND MARK DEAN JOHNSON

      ONE Modernist Passions for “Old Japan:” Saburo Hasegawa and Isamu Noguchi in 1950 BERT WINTHER-TAMAKI

      TWO “Accumulated Impressions”: A Photographic Travelogue of Noguchi and Hasegawa in Japan MATTHEW KIRSCH

      THREE Regretting the Future: Noguchi, and Hasegawa Consider the Direction of Postwar Japanese Art KOICHI KAWASAKI

      FOUR Isamu Noguchi’s Memorial to the Dead of Hiroshima: The Monument that Never Was and an Artistic Vision Shared with Saburo Hasegawa NAOAKI NAKAMURA

      FIVE Saburo Hasegawa in America: A Wide Open Road MARK DEAN JOHNSON

      SIX True Development of an Old Tradition: Isamu Noguchi’s Work in the 1950s DAKIN HART

      SEVEN Toward Abstraction: Saburo Hasegawa’s Exploration of the Photogram YASUFUMI NAKAMORI

      PLATES Saburo Hasegawa and Isamu Noguchi

      PRIMARY SOURCES Remembrance of Saburo Hasegawa ISAMU NOGUCHI

      Noguchi in Japan SABURO HASEGAWA

      CHRONOLOGY Isamu Noguchi and Saburo Hasegawa: 1904–April 1959 MATTHEW KIRSCH

      Japanese Translations
      Contributors
      Photography credits

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