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| | Japanese Art and Japonisme Part I: Early English Writings - Introduction |
 | | Japonisme has traditionally been considered to be primarily a visual arts movement, and even when it was interpreted to include music and other arts, the pictorial arts have always been thought to be the heart of the movement. |  | | The study of Japonisme involves not only researching the influence of one type of works on others in the same field (such as, for example, the influence of prints on prints or of sculpture on sculpture), or in similar fields (for example, in the case of two-dimensional works, the influence of prints on paintings). |  | | The interpretation that the pictorial arts were at the centre of Japonisme is not grounded in fact but results from the exclusive focus of nineteenth-century art historical research on the study of pictorial arts. |
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http://www.ganesha-publishing.com/japanart_intro.htm
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| | Ogata Korin on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Japonisme and decadence: painting the prose of 'A rebours.' (J.-K. Huysmans) |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/O/OgatK1orn.asp
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| | Mosaic (Winnipeg): Japonisme: east-west renaissance in the late 19th century.@ HighBeam Research |
 | | It is suggested that Japonisme was a factor in changing old values in European art and was instrumental in the development of Modernism. |  | | While there were other Oriental influences on European art, Japonisme was both focused and extensive, covering pictorial art, decorative art, to literature and theater. |  | | This intercultural movement was called Japonisme, a term which originally meant an organized study of Japanese art. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:21024422&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
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| | The Oberlin Review \ Arts Article |
 | | Japonisme is a term used to refer to the mass democratization of European art as it was affected by the traditional functionalism and technical precision of Japanese pottery and ceramics. |  | | The Japonisme exhibit is an exception to this rule, since it appears to have all of the characteristics of a universally unimpressive exhibit. |  | | Though entirely appropriate as art, it is the title of Japonisme which puts the observer in disbelief. |
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http://www.oberlin.edu/stupub/ocreview/archives/1997.10.10/arts/blend.html
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| | Van Gogh and Japonisme |
 | | The influence of Japonisme is obvious in his paintings. |  | | The term Japonisme came up in France in the seventies of the 19th century to describe the craze for Japanese culture and art. |  | | The term japonisme was made created by the French journalist and art-critic Philippe Burty in an article published in 1876 to describe the craze for all things Japanese. |
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http://www.artelino.com/articles/van_gogh_japonisme.asp
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| | Beardsley, Japonisme, and the Perversion of the Victorian Ideal |
 | | Beardsley, Japonisme, and the Perversion of the Victorian Ideal. |  | | Zatlin has now continued her work on Beardsley with an extensive study of what she believes is the artist’s principal influence, the Japanese element in his art, briefly touched upon in her first book. |  | | In this handsomely produced study of Beardsley’s japonisme, containing 124 illustrations, which, in addition to those by Beardsley and by Japanese artists, includes a number of such artists as Rossetti, Ricketts, Burne-Jones, and Blake, Zatlin has undoubtedly produced an authoritative work on the influence of Japanese art. |
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http://www.samla.org/sar/bec99sp.htm
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| | BOOK REVIEW OF WINTER 2001 |
 | | "Japonisme" (the term was coined in 1872 by the French critic Philippe Burty) refers to the influence that Japanese art has had on the fine and decorative arts of the West, including fashion, since the mid-1850s. |  | | The book is in many respects a study of Art Nouveau, a major interest of Wichmann's, and he often refers to the Japanese-inspired aspects of Art Nouveau. |  | | This influence peaked in the 1920s with Art Deco, but is in many ways so pervasive and deeply ingrained within Western fine and decorative art traditions that one simply no longer "sees" common themes, motifs, and techniques as being Japanese. |
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http://www.persimmon-mag.com/winter2001/bre_win2001_2.htm
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| | Press Releases - The Gibbes Museum of Art |
 | | Japonisme in Western fine arts began with the admiration for Ukiyo-e prints of the Edo period (1615-1868). |  | | Whistler and Japonisme: Etchings from the Vreede Collection opens July 13, 2004 in the Japanese Print Gallery, and will be on view through December 5, 2004. |  | | His recent gift establishes an essential link between the national and international fascination for Japanese art and culture in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries and the art of the Charleston Renaissance. |
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http://www.gibbesmuseum.org/press_whistler.htm
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| | Morris Museum of Art: Exhibitions |
 | | Japonisme: The Influence of Japanese Art in the South |  | | This exhibition included prints and watercolors by several artists connected to the South whose work demonstrates the widespread influence of Japanese aesthetics on Western art in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. |
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http://www.themorris.org/exhibitions/past/japonisme.html
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| | Japanese Curriculum Units for NEH Workshops |
 | | This approach lends itself well to an examination of Japonisme and Impressionist and Post Impressionist art. |  | | After reviewing these materials, write a ()-page analysis of a selected passage from one travel narrative and the way in which this depiction of the Japanese differs from or is reflected in the works of one of these photographers. |  | | This will be extremely helpful for students who are encouraged to analyze the elements of Japonisme found in Impressionist and Post Impressionist art. |
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http://web.jccc.net/neh/units_japan/smith.htm
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| | art nouveau artists |
 | | Japonisme or Japonism is a term used to describe the influence of Japanese artistic and stylistic themes upon Western Art. |  | | Japonisme is especially evident in French impressionist and Viennese art nouveau but can be seen in other European and American |
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http://mycityshops.com/info/artists/art_nouveau_artists.html
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| | Untitled Document |
 | | The paintings that resulted from this quest I presented as Japonismes at the Bungei Shunju Gallery in 1998. |  | | Soon a whole world opened up for me, as I started studying woodblock prints by Hokusai, Hiroshige, Utamaro and I also became interested in the impact these prints had on Western art, a phenomenon described as Japonisme. |  | | Japanese art presented itself to Western painters as a non-European alternative to the classical inheritance, specifically: |
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http://www.maryleenschiltkamp.com/articles/japonismes.html
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| | CNST 213 Far-Eastern Influences on Fashion |
 | | Japonisme influenced much of the artistic world: fine arts, decorative arts, industrial arts, architecture, literature and music. |  | | It faded in the 1890s and merged with Art Nouveau, which had a curvilinear style very similar to ancient Chinese calligraphy and Japanese art. |  | | These influential factors included the War between Japan and Russia in 1905, the Chinese Revolution in 1911, world exhibitions, fashion publications, and the work of creative designers. |
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http://udel.edu/~orzada/Far-East.htm
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| | Otaku News : Japonisme - Cultural Crossings between Japan and the West |
 | | Coined by a French art critic in 1876, the term Japonisme was used to describe the craze for all things Japanese. |  | | After an introduction telling the story of the first contact, the long isolation and the events leading to the renewal of trade, he turns to Europe and captures the excitement and influence of Japanese prints and artefacts on artists such as Whistler and the Impressionists. |  | | The book is richly illustrated with 250 images, including Japanese prints and artefacts juxtaposed with the works that they directly inspired, as well as decorative arts, posters, advertisements, book illustrations, fashion, cartoons, photography, gardens and architecture. |
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http://www.otakunews.com/article.php?story=245
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| | Japanese Art and Japonisme Part I: Early English Writings |
 | | The term japonisme was coined in 1872 by the French critic and collector Philippe Burty and used to describe a range of European borrowings from Japanese art. |  | | The various sources collected in each set will illustrate the spread of japonisme throughout the Western world and will be essential study for students of Japanese art, Japanese studies and art history. |  | | Discovering the artistic culture of Japan was a major turning point in the development of Western art, and Japanese aesthetics continue to have a profound influence. |
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http://www.ganesha-publishing.com/japanart.htm
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| | Japonisme : Books : Thames & Hudson |
 | | From glassware, jewelry, furniture and ceramics to the celebrated paintings of Monet, Degas, Whistler, Van Gogh and the artists associated with Symbolism and Art Nouveau, Japan shows its influence in patterns and motifs, treatment of space and later in the concept of spontaneity brought to the fore by the Abstract Expressionists. |  | | Siegfried Wichmann, the acknowledged expert on Japonisme, surrounds breathtaking illustrations with a text that marshalls a wealth of detail and opens up new lines of enquiry. |
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http://www.thamesandhudson.com/en/1/0500281637.mxs
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| | Re: re:influence of japanes prints on impressionism |
 | | Wichmann, Siegfried: Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western artists in the 19th and 20th Centuries. |  | | Editors, Society for the Study of Japonisme: Japonisme in Art: An International Symposium. |  | | Weisberg, et al.: Japonisme: Japanese Influence on French Art 1854-1910. |
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http://www.secutor.se/Archive1/messages/833.html
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| | The Infography about Japonisme and Japonism |
 | | Klaus Berger, Japonisme in Western Painting from Whistler to Matisse, Cambridge University Press, 1992. |  | | Japanese Influence on French Art, 1854-1910, The Cleveland Museum of Art, The Rutgers University Art Gallery and The Walters Art Gallery, 1975. |  | | Siegfried Wichmann, Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western Art since 1858, Thames and Hudson, 1999. |
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http://www.infography.com/content/258129310914.html
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| | clayart - thread 'history info needed' |
 | | Japonisme is not an obscure art movement - the French were fasinated by |  | | There is not much written on Japonisme with regard to pottery or ceramics. |  | | The name given to his and other work produced at the time was |
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http://www.potters.org/subject16555.htm
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| | East Asian Art & Archaeology - Newsletter |
 | | Part of this exhibit illustrates the Western Fascination with everything Japanese through a variety of art works such as prints, oil paintings, photographs, a terra-cotta sculpture, and stained glasses. |  | | The exhibit will include more than 100 works of art from over 20 collections emphasizing the post-independence era - 1947 to the present. |  | | The exhibit also includes a unique selection of Japonisme ceramics that incorporate the Japanese fan motif. |
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http://www.umich.edu/~hartspc/NEAAA/issue70/members/exhibitions/articles/70ec_43.html
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| | A69 Kodama Sanehide, America no japonisme |
 | | Kodama’s knowledgeable study of manifestations of Japonisme in American fashion, art, and society traces the milieu in which American writers have come to know of Japan, and includes a chapter about the effects of knowledge of Japan in American literature. |
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http://themargins.net/bib/A/69.htm
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| | Japan, France, and East-West Aesthetics: French Literature, 1867-2000 |
 | | Part I examines the writers' impassioned defense of the painters' revolution as the basis for the first French apprehension of Japan as "a new aesthetic continent," tracking the premises in Naturalist and Symbolist texts. |  | | Through the generations, French japonisme has been about France, about expressive problems in the always dying Cartesian and mimetic codes of French arts and letters, and only secondarily about Japan, imagined source of proposed solutions. |  | | Far from orientalist in Said's sense, however, japonisme exalts the arts of the Other, who possesses agency to a remarkable, even enviable extent. |
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http://inside.fdu.edu/fdupress/04060802.html
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| | Japan and the West: Artistic Cross-Fertilization - The Floating World of Ukiyo-e (Library of Congress) |
 | | One of the most influential promoters was French art critic Philippe Burty, who is credited with coining the term "Japonisme" in 1872. |  | | Western enthusiam for Japanese decorative and graphic art was fed by exposure through art dealers, import shops, museum exhibitions, art academies, world's fairs, published reports, and word of mouth. |  | | Shown here is the title page to a set of ten etchings by French artist Félix-Hilaire Buhot (1847-1898), based on objects from Burty's personal collections. |
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http://www.lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/japan.html
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| | Amazon.com: Books: Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western Art Since 1858 |
 | | For anyone interested in both Japanese Art and European Art at the turn of the last century, this book will become the most satisfying reference book in your collection. |  | | Wichmann's book successfully demonstrates the influence of this fascination on the fine art of the era. |  | | Japonisme: The Japanese Influence on Western Art Since 1858 (Paperback) |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0500281637?v=glance
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| | Table of contents for Library of Congress control number 2003019869 |
 | | Convergence of Painters and Writers 39 Historical Orientations 39 Writers on Painting 45 Early Literary Japonisme: The Goncourts 57 2. |  | | Contents Illustrations 9 Acknowledgments 11 Introduction: The Shock of Encounter 13 The Painters' Discovery of Japanese Prints in Paris 13 Old Guard Orientalism and Avant-garde Japonisme 22 Approaches to Aesthetics 26 Part I: Toward a New Aesthetic in the West 1. |  | | Naturalist and Fin-de-Siecle Configurations 69 Zola's Japoniste Art Novel: L'Oeuvre 69 Japoniste Strategies of Vision in the Rougon-Macquart Cycle 81 Fin-de-Siecle Fictions: Huysmans, Loti, Judith Gautier 92 The First Literary Translations of Japanese Poetry 110 3. |
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http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip048/2003019869.html
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| | Japonaiserie: Discovery, Adoption, Assimilation and Creation |
 | | This assimilation, referred to as Japonisme or Japonaiserie by the French, "paved the way for a whole new philosophy of art and design, which led naturally to an ultimate pursuit of abstraction, while in England the same style was gradually submerged beneath the pseudo medievalism of the Arts and Crafts movement" (Aesthetic 7) |  | | This contact initiated an assimilation of Japanese styles by European artists and artisans, particularly in the areas of design and construction, which ultimately molded and directed the progression of the Aesthetic Movement as a whole. |  | | Notice these influences in his Sofa, his Octogonal Table, and his Armchair. |
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http://www.victorianweb.org/art/design/simmons10.html
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| | Ginkgo and Art Nouveau |
 | | Nancy was the centre of the Art Nouveau movement (New Art) in France starting at the end of the 19th century inspired particularly by Japonisme. |  | | The Ecole de Nancy’s interpretation of Art Nouveau consisted of nature depicted with fierce realism, whereas elsewhere it was more abstract and refined or absent. |  | | Ginkgo and Art Nouveau in Prague (Czech Republic): click here. |
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http://www.xs4all.nl/~kwanten/nancy.htm
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| | katsclass.com |
 | | This particular influence within the Aesthetic Movement is known as Japonisme or Japonaiserie. |  | | There were exibitions of Ukiyo-e art in Paris during the 1860's, and the resulting popularity of anything Japanese in style spread through all fields of both Fine and Decorative arts, as well as design. |  | | For a reverse perspective, here's an interesting site about the influence of Western Culture on Japanese Art and Design :) |
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http://www.katsclass.com/10760/designwk04.htm
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| | East meets West in RISD exhibition - Brown Daily Herald - Arts & Culture |
 | | One of the prints in the exhibit, "The Pearl Diver with the Magic Crystal Pursued by the Dragon King" by Utagawa Kuniyoshi, is depicted in the background of Edouard Manet's painting "Le Repos," on display downstairs in the French Impressionist Gallery. |  | | A new exhibit in the RISD Museum's Japanese gallery, "Japonisme: Japanese Prints and Their Influence in France," brings to light a more subtle aspect of Impressionism - its adaptation of the Japanese aesthetic. |  | | "Japonisme" is on view at the RISD Museum through Feb. 12, 2006. |
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http://www.browndailyherald.com/news/2005/09/19/ArtsCulture/East-Meets.West.In.Risd.Exhibition-989571.shtml
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| | Gabriel P. Weisberg Homepage |
 | | "The First Phase of 'Japonisme in France'." In Ukiyo-e Prints and the Impressionist Painters: Meeting of the East and West. |  | | "Reframing an Exhibition: From Japonisme to Art Nouveau- the Identity of the House of S. Bing," Contemporary French Civilization, Summer/Fall 2002, vol. |  | | "Philippe Burty and a Critical Assessment of Japonisme." In Japonisme in Art, An International Symposium. |
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http://www.gpweisberg.com/articles.shtml
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| | uf music compo/theory/tech calendar of events |
 | | I will be researching the critical reception in Japan of the Japonisme movement in Western music--how Japanese composers and scholars thought of the works by American and European composers that sought to express something "Japanese," whether thematically, musically, or both. |  | | I am also taking classes at the University, which currently include lectures and seminars about artistic movements in France (a major center of Japonisme), late 19th century Japanese music periodicals, Gagaku (traditional Japanese court music), and Takarazuka (the all-female musical revue), as well as Japanese language classes. |  | | The wide scope of the composition program, which encourages students to experiment with many different types of compositional methods and musical languages (while justifying their use), has given me a solid background to research the musical analyses and arguments of Japanese theorists and composers. |
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http://www.arts.ufl.edu/composition/jsmith.html
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| | Madame Butterfly: Japonisme, Puccini, and the Search for the Real Cho-Cho-San - Jan van Rij |
 | | The authors thesis the search for the real Madame Butterfly, also know as Cho-Cho-Sanis not a new topic but a continuation of the controversy that surrounds the people who might have inspired the stories from which Puccinis opera springs. |  | | The shell-shock ending leaves the reader both ambushed and unsatisfied that the search for the real Cho-Cho-San has been completed. |  | | Madame Butterfly: Japonisme, Puccini, and the Search for the Real Cho-Cho-San by Jan van Rij is an engaging hobbyists project. |
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http://www.culturevulture.net/Books2/MadameButterfly.htm
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| | artnet.com: Resource Library: Japonisme |
 | | Scholars in the 20th century have distinguished japonaiserie, the depiction of Japanese subjects or objects in a Western style, from Japonisme, the more profound influence of Japanese aesthetics on Western art. |  | | There are more than 45,000 articles in The Grove Dictionary of Art. |  | | It was coined in 1872 by the French critic, collector and printmaker Philippe Burty to designate a new field of studyartistic, historic and ethnographic, encompassing decorative objects with Japanese designs (similar to 18th-century CHINOISERIE), paintings of scenes set in Japan, and Western paintings, prints and decorative arts influenced by Japanese aesthetics. |
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http://www.artnet.com/library/04/0444/T044421.ASP
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| | CaliforniaArt.com - Miscellaney |
 | | But most women artists working in this period who were influenced by Japanese art adopted it much more wholeheartedly. |  | | Mayhew often worked alongside the prominent printmaking sisters May and Frances Gearhart who lived in nearby Pasadena. |  | | May studied with Arthur Wesley Dow in the 1910s and was greatly influenced by Japonisme. |
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http://www.californiaart.com/brooker.html
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| | Ganesha - Western Sources of Japanese Art and Japonisme |
 | | Ganesha - Western Sources of Japanese Art and Japonisme |  | | 2001 Ganesha Publishing, Japanese Art and Japonisme, Part I: Early English Writings |  | | A series available from the University of Chicago Press |
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http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Complete/Series/G-WSJAJ.html
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| | Asian Pacific Journal Is Arriving! |
 | | One of my longer poems, "Japonisme, Laoisme" is a fun piece engaging the intersection of cultures in the modern world. |  | | The Asian Pacific Journal, a publication of the Asian American Writer's Workshop (www.aaww.org) has finally printed its latest issue, which features my poem "Japonisme, Laoisme" and should arrive in the near future. |  | | The 2003 double issue (Food/Childhood) has arrived, and "Japonisme, Laoisme" appears on pages 112-114. |
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http://journals.aol.com/thaoworra/TheCorner/entries/86
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| | Gabriel P. Weisberg Homepage |
 | | A series of annotated entries listing books, essays, articles and exhibition catalogues that examine the phenomenon of Japonisme from the 1850s until modern times. |  | | Useful for compiling primary references on the topic and for having an overview of the ways writers have studied Japonisme as a cultural and artistic phenomenon in Europe and the United States. |  | | Japonisme: An Annotated Bibliography (co-author), Garland Publishing Co. |
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http://www.gpweisberg.com/books/japonisme1990.shtml
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| | H-Net Review: Lane Earns on Madame Butterfly: Japonisme, Puccini, and the Search for the Real ... |
 | | He also notes the possible inspiration of a Japanese touring group and Claude Debussy. |  | | Van Rij investigates a number of possible influences of Japonisme on Puccini or his librettists--especially Camille Saint-Saens's |  | | Over the past decade, there have been a plethora of works trying to identify the historical models for characters in Puccini's famous opera |
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http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=16356984075051
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| | Reviews Madame Butterfly |
 | | His book is not a musical analysis of the opera. |  | | Is she merely a confection for the delectation of the period's taste in Japonisme? |  | | Added to this mix was the potent mix of Japonisme, the period's taste for the exotic and Puccini's own neuroses and passions. |
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http://www.japanreview.net/review_madame.htm
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| | The Library |
 | | Japonisme Comes to America, The Japanese Impact on the Graphic Arts |
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http://www.mattbrown.biz/library.html
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| | Madame Butterfly: Japonisme, Puccini, and the Search for the Real Cho-Cho-San: Current Amazon U.S.A. One-Edition Data |
 | | Long before Puccini wrote his masterpiece, the tale of the poor Japanese girl abandoned by her foreign lover had been taken up by numerous Western writers as part of the wave of Japonisme in late-19th-century Europe. |  | | The book also suffers from not having made full use of Japanese sources (including a book written by a descendant) as the author does not read or speak Japanese (this last point was confirmed by the author himself). |  | | Following the tragic trail back to its roots in Nagasaki, Jan van Rij believes he's found the answer. |
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http://www.mysqlwebhosting.biz/stuff-1880656523.html
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