Japanese craft

Craft (工芸 kōgei, lit. engineered art) in Japan has a long tradition and history. Included are handicraft by an individual or a group, and A craft is work produced by independent studio artists, working with traditional craft materials and/or processes. According to the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, the crafts (工芸技術 Kōgei Gijutsu) are divided into eight categories: pottery (陶芸 tōgei), textiles, lacquerware, metalworking, dollmaking, woodworking, papermaking, and other. The categories are subdivided into a number of more specific subcategories. The Japan Kōgei Association concurs with these definitions. The many variations are officially recognized and protected by the government. Those working in crafts are eligible for recognition either individually (Individual Certification) or as part of a group (Preservation Group Certification) into the list of Living National Treasures of Japan (crafts). Some crafts enjoy status as meibutsu, or regional specialties.

Each craft demands a set of specialized skills. Japanese craft works serve a functional or utilitarian purpose, though they may be handled and exhibited similar to visual art objects.

History

Craft dates back since humans settled on the Japanese islands. Handicrafting has its roots in the rural crafts—the material-goods necessities—of ancient times. Traditionally handicrafters used natural, indigenous materials, which continues to be emphasised today for the most part. Traditionally objects were created to be used and not just to be placed. Therefore the difference between craft as a decorative arts and the fine art did not truly exist, as opposed to in the West. Crafts were needed for all layers of society and became increasingly sophisticated in their design and execution. Craft has close ties to folk art, however developed into fine art as well as the concept of wabi-sabi aesthetics developed. Craftsmen and women therefore became artisans with increasing sophistication. However wares were not just produced for domestic consumption, but at some point items such as ceramics made by studio craft were also produced for export and became an important pillar of the economy.

Crafts were developed and taught to succeeding generations. Dentō (伝 統) is in which systems of Japanese traditions were passed down within a teacher-student relationship (shitei 師弟). It encompassed strict rules that had to be observed in order to enable learning and teaching of a way ( 道). The wisdom could be taught either orally (Denshō 伝承), or in writing (Densho 伝書). It was quite common that the mastery in certain crafts were passed down within the family from one generation to the next, establishing veritable dynasties. In that case the established master's name was assumed instead of the personal one. Should there be an absence of a male heir, a relative or a student could be adopted in order to continue the line and assume the prestigious name.

With the end of the Edo period and the advent of the modern Meiji era, industrial production was introduced and western objects and styles were copied and started replacing the old. On the fine art level, patrons such as the feudal daimyō lords were not able to support local artisans to the extend like in the past. Although handmade Japanese craft used to be the dominant source of objects in daily life, the modern era and industrial production as well as import from abroad has pushed it to the sides of the economy. Traditional craft began to wane and disappeared in many areas as tastes and production methods changed. Forms such as swordmaking became obsolete. Scholars such as Okakura Kakuzō wrote against the fashionable primacy of western art and founded the periodical Kokka (國華, lit. Flower of the Nation) draw attention to the issue. Specific crafts that have been practiced for centuries were under increasing threat, while others however such as glassmaking were more recent developments introduced from the west and saw a rise.

Although objects were put under protection by the imperial government as National Treasures, it took some time to recognise the intangible cultural properties. In order to further protect traditional crafts and arts, the government instituted in 1890 the system of Imperial Household Artist (帝室技芸員, Teishitsu Gigei-in), given to an artist who was officially appointed to create works of art for the Tokyo Imperial Palace and other imperial residences. These artists were considered most famous and prestigious and worked in the areas such as painting, ceramics, and lacquer ware. Although this system of patronage offered some kind of protection to them, other crafts on the folk art level were left exposed. The mingei (民芸, "folk arts" or "arts of the people") was the folk art movement that developed in the late 1920s and 1930s in reaction to this development. Its founding father was Yanagi Sōetsu (1889–1961). The philosophical pillar of mingei is "hand-crafted art of ordinary people" (民衆的な工芸 (minshū-teki-na kōgei)). Yanagi Sōetsu discovered beauty in everyday ordinary and utilitarian objects created by nameless and unknown craftsmen.

The Second World War left the country devastated and craft suffered as a result. The government introduced a new system of Living National Treasure to recognise and protect individual craftspeople on the fine art and folk art level, as well as groups. To be included in the list of Living National Treasures of Japan (crafts) came with financial support as well to train new generations of artisans so that the art forms would continue. The national government instituted in 1950 the intangible cultural properties. This is given for cultural property considered of high historical or artistic value of craft techniques. The term refers exclusively to human skills possessed by individuals or groups which are indispensable to produce Cultural Properties. It has also taken a further step to inscribe for example in 2009 yūki-tsumugi into the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists. Prefectural governments also have their own system of recognising and protecting local crafts, as well as on the municipal level. Although the government has taken steps to protect the traditional arts and crafts, on the private sector artisans continue to stay under challenge to stay true to tradition but at the same time be able to interpret old forms and create new ideas in order to survive and stay relevant to private customers. They also face the dilemma of an ageing society where knowledge is not passed down to enough pupils of the younger generation, which means dentō teacher-pupil relationship within families breaks down if a successor is not found.[1] As the societal rules are changing and becoming more relaxed, the traditional patriarchal system is forced to undergo changes as well. In the past males were predominantly the holders of master' titles in the most prestigious crafts. Ceramist Tokuda Yasokichi IV is the first female to succeed as a master following her father, since he did not have any sons and was unwilling to adopt a male heir. Despite the modernisation and westernisation, a number of forms and traditions still exist, partly due to the close connectivity they have with traditions and art forms such as the continued practice of the Japanese tea ceremony, ikebana, and to a degree martial arts in the case of swordmaking for example.

The Japan Traditional Kōgei Exhibition (日本伝統工芸展) takes place every year in order to exhibit and reach out to the public.[2] In 2015, the Museum of Arts and Design in New York exhibited a number of modern kōgei artists in an effort to also introduce Japanese craft to an international audience.[3][4]

Ceramics

Japanese pottery and porcelain (陶磁器, Jp. tojiki; also 焼きもの, Jp. yakimono; 陶芸, Jp. tōgei), is one of the country's oldest art forms, dates back to the Neolithic period. Kilns have produced earthenware, pottery, stoneware, glazed pottery, glazed stoneware, porcelain, and blue-and-white ware. Japan has an exceptionally long and successful history of ceramic production. Earthenwares were created as early as the Jōmon period (10,000-300 BCE), giving Japan one of the oldest ceramic traditions in the world. Japan is further distinguished by the unusual esteem that ceramics holds within its artistic tradition, owing to the enduring popularity of the tea ceremony.

Some of the recognised techniques of Japanese ceramic craft are:[5]

There are many different types of Japanese ware. Those more identified as being close to the craft movement include:[6]

Coil-built Tokoname stoneware with ash glaze. Kamakura period, 14th century

Textiles

Textile crafts include silk, hemp, and cotton, woven (after spinning and dyeing) in forms from timeless folk designs to complex court patterns. Village crafts that evolved from ancient folk traditions also continued in weaving and indigo dyeing in Hokkaidō by the Ainu people, whose distinctive designs have prehistoric prototypes, and by other remote farming families in northern Japan.

Textiles were used primarily for Japanese clothing and include furisode, jūnihitoe, kimono, sokutai, yukata, obi, and many other items. Headgear can include kanzashi. Footwear such as geta need textiles as well.

The different techniques for dyeing designs onto fabric are:[7]

Yūzen detail of a kimono

The weaving technique for dyed threads to make fabric are:[8]

Amongst the more well-known regional types are:[9]

Lacquerware

Writing lacquer box by Ogata Kōrin, Edo period (National Treasure)

Japanese lacquerware can be traced to prehistoric finds. Lacquer ware is most often made from wooden objects, which receive multiple layers of refined lac juices, each of which must dry before the next is applied. These layers make a tough skin impervious to water damage and to resist breakage, providing lightweight, easy-to-clean utensils of every sort. The decoration on such lacquers, whether carved through different colored layers or in surface designs, applied with gold or inlaid with precious substances, has been a prized art form since the Nara period (A.D. 710-94). (See also Lacquerware.)

Items produced are for daily necessities like bowls and trays, but also tea ceremony utensils such as chaki tea caddies and kōgō incense containers. Items include in the past were also netsuke and inrō. Lacquerware is closely entwined with wood and bamboo work.

Material is either wood, but bamboo (藍胎 rantai) or linen (乾漆 kanshitsu) can also be used.[10]

The different techniques to coat and paint are:[11]

Amongst the more well-known types are:[12]

Wood and bamboo

Wood and bamboo have a place in Japanese art and history since the beginning. Secular and religious buildings were made out of this material as well as items used for the household. Japanese carpentry has a long tradition. Items that are produced are normally dishes and boxes.

Other items of woodwork are yosegi and the making of furniture such as tansu. Japanese tea ceremony is closely entwined with bamboo work for spoons, and woodwork and lacquerware for natsume.

Types of woodwork include:[13]

Japanese basket showing the kagome pattern

Bamboowork implements are produced for tea ceremony, ikebana flower arrangement and interior goods. The types of bamboowork are:[14]

The art of basket weaving such as kagome (籠目) is well known; its name is composed from the words kago, meaning "basket", and me, meaning "eye(s)", referring to the pattern of holes in a woven basket. It is a weaved arrangement of laths composed of interlaced triangles such that each point where two laths cross has four neighboring points, forming the pattern of a trihexagonal tiling. The weaved process gives the Kagome a chiral wallpaper group symmetry, p6, (632).

Other materials such as reeds can also be included. Neko Chigura is a traditional form of weaving baskets for cats.

Amongst the more well-known types are:[15]

Metalwork

Early Japanese iron-working techniques date back to the 2-3rd century BCE. Japanese swordsmithing is of extremely high quality and greatly valued. These swords originated before the 1st century B.C. and reached their height of popularity as the chief possession of warlords and samurai. The production of a sword has retained something of the religious quality it once had in embodying the soul of the samurai and the martial spirit of Japan. Swordsmithing is considered a separate art form and moved beyond the craft it once started out as.

Items for daily use were also made out of metal and a whole section of craft developed around it.

Casting is creating the form by melting. The techniques include:[16]

Another for is smithing (鍛金), which is creating forms by beating.

To create various patterns on the surface, metal carving is used to apply decorative designs. The techniques include carving (彫り), metal inlay (象嵌), and embossing (打ち出し).[17]

Amongst the more well-known types are:[18]

Dolls

Hinamatsuri dolls of the emperor and empress

There are various types of traditional Japanese dolls (人形 ningyō, lit. "human form"), some representing children and babies, some the imperial court, warriors and heroes, fairy-tale characters, gods and (rarely) demons, and also people of the daily life of Japanese cities. Many have a long tradition and are still made today, for household shrines, for formal gift-giving, or for festival celebrations such as Hinamatsuri, the doll festival, or Kodomo no Hi, Children's Day. Some are manufactured as a local craft, to be purchased by pilgrims as a souvenir of a temple visit or some other trip.

There are four different base materials used to make dolls:[19]

The painting or application techniques are:[24]

Known types are for example Hakata ningyō (博多人形).[30]

Paper making

The Japanese art of making paper from the mulberry plant called washi (和紙) is thought to have begun in the 6th century A.D. Dyeing paper with a wide variety of hues and decorating it with designs became a major preoccupation of the Heian court, and the enjoyment of beautiful paper and its use has continued thereafter, with some modern adaptations. The traditionally made paper called Izumo (after the shrine area where it is made) was especially desired for fusuma (sliding panels) decoration, artists' papers, and elegant letter paper. Some printmakers have their own logo made into their papers, and since the Meiji period, another special application has been Western marbleized end papers (made by the Atelier Miura in Tokyo).

Others

Glass

Glass bowl, Kofun period, 6th century, perhaps from the tomb of Emperor Ankan, in Habikino, Osaka

The tradition of glass production goes back far in history into the Kofun period, but was used very rarely and more for decorative purposes such as being included in hairneedles. Only relatively late in the Edo period did it experience increased popularity and with the beginning of the modernisation during the Meiji era did large-scale industrial production of glassware commence. Nevertheless glass continues to exist as a craft, for example Edokiriko (江戸切子).[31] The various techniques used are:[32]

Cloisonné

Vase with Flowering Cherry and Birds by Ando Cloisonné Company, circa 1910.

Cloisonné (截金, shippō) is a glass-like glaze that is applied on a metal framework, and then fired in a kiln.[37] It developed especially in Owari province around Nagoya in the late Edo period and going into the Meiji era. One of the leading traditional producing companies that still exist is the Ando Cloisonné Company.

Techniques of shippō include:

Gem carving

Gem carving (, gyoku) is carving naturally patterned agate or various hard crystals into tea bowls and incense containers.[41]

Decorative metal cutting

Kirikane (截金) is a decorative technique used for paintings and Buddhist statues, which applies gold leaf, silver leaf, platinum leaf cut into geometric patterns of lines, diamonds and triangles.[42][43]

Inkstone carving

Calligraphy is considered one of the classical refinements and art forms. Inkstone carving (硯 suzuri) and its utensils such as boxes for it was therefore greatly valued and developed into its own arts and crafts form.[44][45]

Ivory carving

Bachiru (撥鏤) is the art of engraving and dyeing ivory.[46]

See also

References

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  4. http://www.architecturaldigest.com/gallery/japanese-kogei-future-forward-mad-museum/all
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