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Background
This Guide is essentially an annotated
selective bibliography, but at the outset we indulge ourselves for a moment
and offer some comments on the history of English-language publications on Japanese
art.
Probably the first important work in English is Ernest Fenollosa's Epochs of Chinese
and Japanese Art, posthumously published in 1912, a book that inevitably has
been superseded but that was an astounding achievement at the time. Other pre-war
books that must be mentioned are Langdon Warner, Japanese Sculpture of the Suiko
Period (New Haven: Yale University Press for the Cleveland Museum of Art, 1923);
Chie Hirano, Kiyonaga: A Study of His Life and Work (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press for the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1939); and Jon Covell, Under
the Seal of Sesshu (privately printed, 1941).Generally, however, apart from material
concerned with Japanese crafts and export wares, writing before World War II seems
to have been chiefly concerned with prints and netsuke (miniature sculptures).
Most of the significant work produced after World War II and before the 1990s was
in the form of the exhibition catalogue. In the 1950s, catalogues began to show important
unfamiliar material, but they were chiefly picture books with perfunctory introductions
and captions. In the late 1960s, however, the catalogue became in effect a significant
book on the topic. Early examples of this new sort of exhibition catalogue are John
M. Rosenfield and Shujiro Shimada, Traditions of Japanese Art (Cambridge,
Mass.: Fogg Art Museum, 1970) and Jan Fontein and Money L. Hickman, Zen Painting
and Calligraphy (Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 1970). Interestingly, in those
days the university presses seem to have played almost no role in publishing books
on Japanese art (for example, Rosenfield and Shimada's book was published by the
Fogg Art Museum, not by Harvard University Press). No doubt, this was partly
because there were very few scholars working in the field. To the best of our knowledge,
the first book on Japanese art published by an American university press (we are
not including an occasional brief catalogue published by a university museum) was
Langdon Warner's The Enduring Art of Japan (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
Press, 1952), and the second was Warner's Japanese Sculpture of the Tempyo Period,
posthumously published in two volumes in 1959 by Harvard University Press, and reissued
in one volume in 1964. (Warner's book on Suiko sculpture, to repeat, was published
by Yale but for the Cleveland Museum of Art, and Hirano's book on Kiyonaga was published
by Harvard but for the Museum of Fine Arts.) Borderline examples of university engagement
are found in James Cahill's Sakaki Hyakusen (1983), published by the Institute
of East Asian Studies, University of California, and Christine Guth Kanda, Shinzo
(1985), published by the Council on East Asian Studies and distributed by Harvard
University Press. It was not until 1987, when the University of Hawai'i Press published
Stephen Addiss's Tall Mountains and Flowing Waters: The Arts of Uragami Gyokudo,
that the university presses began to play an active role in publishing books on Japanese
art. Recently the university presses at Hawai'i and Princeton especially have shown
an interest in Japanese art, but the exhibition catalogue continues to be the dominant
form of publication.
It might be noted, too, that in contrast with some of the most recent books on art,
which emphasize social context, catalogues inevitably stress the artwork itself.
They usually do set forth the social or political or religious context, but since
each work commonly is illustrated in color, and since the largest market is the visitor
to the museum, the chief concern is with the aesthetic value of the work. University
press books, on the other hand, tend to be more concerned with the setting than with
the works, with (so to speak) the context (social, political, religious) rather than
the text (the work itself). They may be chiefly concerned with systems of patronage,
or images of women, or workshop practices, important issues that may be discussed
in terms of otherwise negligble works. An example is a fairly recent Princeton University
Press book, Donald F. McCallum's Zenkoji and Its Icon: A Study in Medieval Japanese
Religious Art (1994). Because the icon in question (the text, as we now say)
is a secret image, one never seen by the public and not seen even by the priests
of the temple, McCallum's concern cannot be with the aesthetic properties of the
image; rather, his concern is with why the image was widely copied, and with the
cult that believed the Zenkoji icon was the Buddha incarnate. We are not saying,
however, that university press books invariably ignore aesthetic matters. An example
of a university press book that is much concerned with the objects themselves is
Elizabeth ten Grotenhuis's forthcoming Japanese Mandalas: Representations of Sacred
Geography (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 1998).
If one compares English-language writings on Japanese art with those on, say, Italian
Renaissance art, or the Impressionists, or contemporary American art, one is justified
in saying that very little has been published on Japan. On the other hand, even by
1987, when the Asia Society first published this bibliography, there were indeed
many books (again, chiefly catalogues of important exhibitions) and articles worth
reading. It was our intention then to offer some guidance by calling attention to
the major writings on the arts of Japan. Six years later the Guide was revised
for inclusion in Penelope Mason's History of Japanese Art (New York: Abrams,
1993), and now (spring 1998) at the invitation of the Asia Society and with the permission
of Harry N. Abrams, Inc., we have revised it again.
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