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Shinto : discovery of the divine in Japanese art / Sinéad Vilbar and Kevin Gray Carr ; with contributions by Talia J. Andrei [and 9 others]

Catalog Data

Author:
Vilbar, Sinéad  Search this
Carr, Kevin Gray 1974-  Search this
Iwata, Shigeki  Search this
Taniguchi, Kōsei 1972-  Search this
Shimizu, Ken  Search this
Contributor:
Andrei, Talia J.  Search this
Translator:
Wakabayashi, Judy  Search this
Host institution:
Cleveland Museum of Art  Search this
Physical description:
xix, 292 pages : color illustrations, map, photographs ; 27 x 31 cm
Type:
Exhibitions
Exhibition catalogs
Essays
Illustrated works
Place:
Japan
Date:
2019
Notes:
"Published on the occasion of 'Shinto: Discovery of the Divine in Japanese Art', an exhibition organized by the Cleveland Museum of Art with the special cooperation of the Nara National Museum and special support of the Japan Foundation on view April 9-June 30, 2019"--Page x.
"Shinto: Discovery of the Divine in Japanese Art" : April 9-June 30, 2019, the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, United States.
Contents:
On art and kami / Sinéad Vilbar -- Shinto and sacred sites / Kevin Gray Carr -- Kami in Japanese mythology / Kevin Gray Carr -- Entertaining the gods. Shinto rituals / Sinéad Vilbar -- Gods and great houses. Kami and the nobility / Kevin Gray Carr -- Gods embodied. Shinzō : their emergence and forms / Iwata Shigeki -- Moving with the gods. Pilgrimage, procession, and festival / Kevin Gray Carr -- Combinations. Kami and Buddhist deitities : Kami-Buddhist combinatory thought and religious art in Japan / Taniguchi Kōsei -- Gifts for the gods. The world of shrine treasures and former shrine treasures / Shimizu Ken
Summary:
"Conveying the impressive range and beauty of art associated with the tradition of kami veneration in Japan, 'Shinto: Discovery of the Divine in Japanese Art' presents works in various media--caligraphy, painting,s culpture, costume, and decorative arts--assembled from religious institutions and museums in Japan, and from collections in the United States. Kami veneration, a practice often referred to as Shinto in modern sources, is unique to Japan, although a number of its components stem from court and religious rituals in neighboring countries. 'Shinto' accompanies an exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Art, presented with the special cooperation of the Nara National Museum in Japan, and is written by top scholars from the United States and Japan. It is the first catalogue in any language to bring together significant works from both U.S. and Japanese collections related to kami veneration, documenting these rare and fragile works." --publisher's description, dust jacket.
Topic:
Shinto art  Search this
Shinto art objects  Search this
Shinto and art  Search this
Art, Japanese  Search this
Call number:
N8194.A3 V55 2019
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1109360