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Ayako
Ono
Japonisme in Britain: Whistler, Menpes, Henry, Hornel and
Nineteenth-century Japan
London and New York: Routledge, Curzon, 2003.
Pages: xxi, 250; illustrations, bibliography and index.
ISBN: 0-415-29686-2
Hard cover: $115.00 |
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European japonisme
has commanded attention during the past thirty-five years. Beginning
in the 1970s, Dr. Gabriel Weisberg opened the field with his wide-ranging
analyses, capping them in 1990 with a thorough annotated bibliography
of scholarly work on japonisme that continues to
be the point of embarkation for young scholars. His exhibitions and
accompanying catalogues, from the 1975 Japonisme: the Japanese
Influence on French Art, 1854-1910, for the Cleveland Museum
of Art, to the recently opened (2004) The Origins of L'Art
Nouveau: The Bing Empire for the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam,
continue to add to our knowledge. In contrast, outside of James McNeill
Whistler, studied by American and French as well as British writers,
there has been a paucity of scholarly studies of the influence of
Japanese art in Britain during the last half of the nineteenth century.
This relatively new subject for scholars boasts studies of E. W. Godwin,
Arthur Lazenby Liberty, Christopher Dresser, and Aubrey Beardsley.
Toshio Yokoyama's ground breaking publication, Japan in the
Victorian Mind (London, 1987), explores the social effects
of Japanese art and artifacts on English culture. There is wide room
for studies of textiles, tableware, furniture, and interior design,
fashion design, children's book illustration, graphic art, painting,
and decorative art. British collectors of Japanese applied arts and
those who purchased Japanese-influenced art and objects merit their
own monographs. |
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Artists have been the prime object
of scholarship, and Ayako Ono has studied four artists who worked
in England: Whistler, Mortimer Menpes, an Australian, George Henry
and Edward Atkinson Hornel, the latter two part of the artistic group
known as the Glasgow Boys. Her purpose is "to consider how western
artists understood and accepted Japanese art as a source of inspiration,"
a task she accomplishes primarily by examining their paintings (xvi).
Ono's first chapter uses the lens of exhibitions of Japanese art and
objects in Britain to focus on the manner in which a taste for this
radically different art was built, and her brief survey of English
artists and craftsmen who adopted facets of Japanese style and technique
includes enough names and brief descriptions of English and Scottish
artists, craftsmen, and merchants to whet the palate for more studies.
Chapter Two belongs to a study of Whistler's japonisme,
ground well trodden. But Ono brings a freshbecause it is a Japaneseperspective
to this material, and her deft analysis considers what Japanese techniques
Whistler tried to adapt in his paintings and the degree to which he
succeeded. Her most valuable contribution in this chapter, however,
is her examination of Whistler's inclusion of Japanese objects in
his work, and her relation of these objects to his "attempt to
produce subjectless paintings" (66). |
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Among the artists Whistler influenced
was Mortimer Menpes, and Chapter Three explores the combined influence
of Whistler and European artists on one hand, and on the other, Menpes'
encounter with Japanese art during his trips to that country. Like
Whistler, Menpes did not understand Japanese painting techniques.
Consequently, he merely imported trappings of Japanese art into his
realistic paintings and graphics. But back in London after his second
trip to Japan, he adventurously built a studio and home according
to what he perceived as Japanese style, and decorated it with Japanese
fittings. In this fascinating chapter, Ono discusses Menpes' studio-house;
his acquaintance with the prominent Japanese painter Kawanabe Kyosai;
as well as Menpes' photographs of Japanese subjects, and their relation
to his subsequent work. Chapter Four takes up George Henry and Edward
Atkinson Hornel. Like Menpes, they were interested enough in Japanese
art to take a joint trip to Japan where they collected over 400 souvenir
photographs (for export) of the type called Yokohama Shashin.
In varying degrees these scenes of daily life influenced their art,
Henry gaining a "genuine awareness of Japanese colour,"
while Hornel effectively used a "European manner to create his
own original style when treating Japanese subject matter" (124,
129). |
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There are, in addition to these chapters,
ten appendices that document the furnishings of Whistler's home on
Tite Street; his collections of oriental porcelain, and blue and white
china; Raphael Collin's (flavorlessly translated) recollections of
the great Japanese art dealer, Tademasa Hayashi; a transcription of
a supposed Japanese citizen's view of Commodore Perry's arrival in
Japan; the 1888 London exhibition of 177 pieces of Menpes's work;
the 1903 show of his collection of 265 works by Whistler; and the
Yokohama Museum's forty-nine etchings by Menpes. Rounding out this
group are Hornel's 9 February 1895 lecture on Japanese life and art,
the 20 June 1894 interview of Henry on the same subject, a letter
to Hornel, and a glossary of terms. |
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There are interesting sections of
this book although the group of artists examined is somewhat eccentric.
As mentioned above, Whistler has been much studied and his relation
to Japanese art has been far from ignored; articles and books detailing
his relation to Japanese prints continue to be published. This book
would have been the place for Ono's particular contribution
the Japanese reaction to Whistler. Why is that subject omitted? Even
the mention of a lack of contemporary Japanese sources would not merely
have been helpful, it would chart the way for further studies. Furthermore,
Whistler and Menpes worked in London, while Henry and Hornel were
in Glasgow, but Ono presents no rationale for her selection of these
four artists. Were there links among the four? Any correspondence?
Were there other artists in the United Kingdom who came under the
Japanese influence? Was it some other compelling, but unmentioned,
reason? Or was it merely her residency at the Whistler Center that
led to her choice? Moreover, while Ono presents much information,
she is not guided by some of the larger questions. For example, was
there a difference between Whistler and Menpes and the Scottish artists
in their acceptance of Japanese influencein other words, regional
differences? How did the shifts in the English attitude to things
Japanese during the last half of the century affect their views? What
do sales of these four artists' work tell us about japonisme
in Britain? What part did Japanese artists working in Britain play
in the phenomenon of japonisme? Most important is the lack
of discussion of Japanese sources. With the exception of Whistler,
these westerners met Japanese artists and photographers on their trips
to Japan, as Ono documents. But a reader who threads through her mention
of these meetings and therefore yearns to know what the Japanese art
world thought of the three western artists, is greatly disappointed;
that material is lackingwhether through lacunae in the records
or the author's omission is not clear. At times, avenues of research
are dead ends, and this book fails to document if those paths were
even considered. Finally, abundant and inexcusable typographical errors
stud the pages. Nonetheless, if the book is slight, the material is
interestingperhaps even more so in Japan where this study recently
won Ayako Ono a prize. |
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Linda Gertner Zatlin
Professor of English
Morehouse College
lzatlin@morehouse.edu |
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© 20056 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Linda Gertner Zatlin. All Rights Reserved. |
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