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Events

Japanese Porcelain: A Four Hundred Year History

Hare and Moon. Dish (1690-1730). Porcelain with underglazed cobalt blue design. ©The Trustees of the British Museum.Franks.1292+
Event - Sainsbury Institute

木曜日 1 11月, 2012
6:15pm GMT

Toshiba Lectures in Japanese Art and Science: 1, 8, 15 November 2012

Speaker

Nicole Coolidge Rousmaniere (Research Director, Sainsbury Institute and Curator, The British Museum)

The Toshiba Lectures in Japanese Art provide a public platform for a senior scholar of Japanese arts to present a research project which is already well-developed in a series of three lectures to a broad public audience.

Lecture 1: November 6.15pm

Vessels of Influence, China and the Birth of Porcelain in Early Modern Japan
BP Lecture Theatre, The British Museum, London WC1B 3DG
(booking essential for the British Museum lecture via www.britishmuseum.org or 02073238181,or contact the Sainsbury Institute at 01603 597507)

Lecture 2: 8 November 6.15pm

White Gold, Japanese Export Porcelain and International Trade Networks
Brunei Lecture Theatre, SOAS, University of London, London WC1H 0XG

Lecture 3: 15 November 6pm

Japanese Porcelain Today, Future Directions and Past References
Norwich Cathedral Hostry, Weston Room Norwich NR1 4EH

About the Lecture

With the four-hundredth anniversary rapidly approaching, now is a particularly opportune occasion to re-examine the history of Japanese porcelain from a modern angle. This four hundred year retrospective of the evolution of Japanese porcelain affords multiple new interpretations. Many questions have long remained unanswered. For example, why did Japan only begin to produce porcelain for the first time around 1610, centuries after both China and Korea had mastered the technique? How, given its late start, was Japanese porcelain able to be exported throughout Asia, the Middle East and Europe by the 1660s to such high acclaim? Competition between kilns for market share both within Japan and abroad was rife. Not withstanding intrigues, government and trade restrictions as well as changing consumer tastes, Japanese porcelain has continued to flourish these 400 years adapting to market demand and to the latest styles. Today, porcelain production in Japan continues unabated both in traditional centres and by ceramic artists creating powerful modern expressions in new areas. Professor Rousmaniere in this series of three lectures uncovers the history of Japanese porcelain from its complicated birth through its strong export period to its powerful contemporary presence. Recent archaeological and art historical data are introduced to create a revitalised picture of the industry as a whole. New light will also be shed on the significant Japanese ceramics in the British Museum created by pioneering collector Augustus Wollaston Franks, first curator and then Keeper at the British Museum from 1851-1896.

About the Speaker

Nicole Coolidge Rousmaniere is Professor of Japanese Art and Culture at the University of East Anglia and Research Director at the Sainsbury Institute. She is currently seconded to the British Museum as a curator in the Department of Asia working on its extensive ceramic collection. Her research interests include medieval to contemporary ceramic history in East Asian trade networks, the history of Japanese archaeology, the collecting of Japanese artefacts and art objects in Asia and Europe, contemporary Japanese craft expression and manga.

All Welcome. Admission Free.
Places are limited and seats are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis.

Contact us

Sponsored by: Toshiba International Foundation (TIFO)
In association with: Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, The British Museum, SOAS, Japan Society

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