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1 History  



1.1  Interior design  







2 In media  





3 Images  





4 See also  





5 References  





6 Further reading  





7 External links  














Anglo-Japanese style: Difference between revisions






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[[Oscar Wilde]] reported and commented upon the progress of the style, referring to "the influence which Eastern art is having on us in Europe, and the fascination of all Japanese work" in a lecture he gave in the United States in 1882 (''The English Renaissance of Art'').

[[Oscar Wilde]] reported and commented upon the progress of the style, referring to "the influence which Eastern art is having on us in Europe, and the fascination of all Japanese work" in a lecture he gave in the United States in 1882 (''The English Renaissance of Art'').


== In media ==

In the television show ''[[Salvage Hunters]]: The Restorers'' season 3 episode 6 antique furniture restorer Alex Webster renovated an old French cabinet into an Anglo-Japanese inspired piece of furniture brought to him by dealer Tony Geering.<ref>http://www.puritanvalues.co.uk/newariv4.htm</ref><ref>https://www.betaseries.com/en/episode/salvage-hunters-the-restorers/s03e06</ref>



==Images==

==Images==


Revision as of 22:49, 9 November 2020

SideboardbyEdward William Godwin (c. 1867-70)

The Anglo-Japanese style developed in the period from approximately 1851 to 1900, when a new appreciation for Japanese design and culture affected British art, especially the decorative arts and architecture of England. The first use of the term "Anglo-Japanese" occurs in 1851.[1] The style was partly the local version of a wider European cultural trend called Japonisme, but had distinct characteristics. The British interest in Eastern or Oriental design and culture is regarded as a characteristic of the Aesthetic Movement during the same period.

History

Garden at Tatton Park built in the Anglo-Japanese style

The Museum of Ornamental Art, later the Victoria and Albert Museum, bought Japanese lacquer and porcelain in 1852, and again in 1854 with the purchase of 37 items from the exhibition at the Old Water-Colour Society, London. Japanese art was exhibited at London in 1851, Dublin in 1853; Edinburgh 1856 and 1857; Manchester in 1857, and Bristol in 1861. The 1862 International Exhibition in London had a Japanese display which has been considered 'one of the most influential events in the history of Japanese art in the West.'[2]

The painter James Abbott McNeill Whistler introduced the Pre-Raphaelite painter and poet Dante Gabriel RossettitoJapanese art, thus establishing a veritable cult of Japan within this Bohemian circle. By the 1880s, the style had become a major influence on the art and decoration of the time, leaving its mark on Whistler's paintings and designs (principally The Peacock Room). The style developed in advance of the British Arts and Crafts Movement (the Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society was formed as late as 1887), but both are best regarded as branches from the mainstream Aesthetic Movement.

The Japanese garden at Tatton Park is an example of Anglo-Japanese gardening style. Although elements of traditional Japanese garden design was incorporated, many English garden elements flowed into the overall appearance as well.[3][4][5]

Interior design

Anglo-Japanese furniture designs by E.W. Godwin 1877

In the design of furniture, the most common and characteristic features are simple rectilinear structure, minimal decoration, often limited to incised and gilt lines or motifs such as 'mons', and most particularly an ebonized finish (or even ebony) echoing the well known 'japanned' finish. Halen (p. 69) proposes an ebonized chair exhibited at the 1862 International Exhibition by A.F. Bornemann & Co of Bath, and described (and possibly designed) by Christopher Dresser as the quaint and unique Japanese character, to be the first documented piece of furniture in the Anglo-Japanese style. The types of furniture required in England such as wardrobes, sideboards and even dining-tables and easy-chairs did not have a Japanese precedent therefore Japanese principles and motifs had to be adapted to existing types in order to meet English requirements.

In much the same way as with Anglo-Japanese furniture, early examples of Japanese influence and inspiration in ceramics were noted by Dresser in his reviews of the International Exhibition, London 1862, where he remarked on Minton's 'vases enriched with Chinese or Japanese ornament'.[6]

In the early 1870s, the Watcombe potteryinDevon produced unglazed terracotta wares, some of which rely entirely on Japanese forms and the natural colour of the clay for their ornamental effect. Japanese inspired porcelains by the Worcester porcelain factory at a similar date were much admired by the Japanese themselves. Some pottery produced at the Linthorpe Pottery, founded in 1879, closely followed Japanese examples in simple forms and especially in rich ceramic glaze effects quite revolutionary in the English market. In commercial mass-produced tablewares, the style was most represented by transfer prints depicting Japanese botanical or animal motifs such as bamboos, and birds; scenes of Japan or Japanese objects such as fans. Often these were placed in a novel asymmetrical fashion in defiance of Western tradition. Glass ware was also influenced by Japanese art and the 'Frog decanter' exhibited by Thomas Webb at the International Exhibition in Paris 1867 is in its subject, simplicity and asymmetry the earliest example of Japanese influence on English glass identified to date.

The style anticipated the minimalism of 20th-century Modernism. British designers working in this style include Christopher Dresser; Edward William Godwin; James Lamb; and perhaps Philip Webb; and the decorative arts wall painting of James Abbott McNeill Whistler. In the United States some of the glass and silverwork by Louis Comfort Tiffany, textiles and wallpaper by Candace Wheeler, and the furniture of Kimbel & Cabus, Daniel Pabst, Nimura & Sato, and the Herter Brothers (particularly that produced after 1870) shows influence of the Anglo-Japanese style.

Oscar Wilde reported and commented upon the progress of the style, referring to "the influence which Eastern art is having on us in Europe, and the fascination of all Japanese work" in a lecture he gave in the United States in 1882 (The English Renaissance of Art).

In media

In the television show Salvage Hunters: The Restorers season 3 episode 6 antique furniture restorer Alex Webster renovated an old French cabinet into an Anglo-Japanese inspired piece of furniture brought to him by dealer Tony Geering.[7][8]

Images

See also

References

  1. ^ Widar Halen. Christopher Dresser1990, p. 33
  • ^ Widar Halen. Christopher Dresser. 1990, p. 34
  • ^ https://www.tattonpark.org.uk/what_to_see_and_do/mansion/mansion_exhibitions/alan-de-tattons-japanese-garden.aspx
  • ^ https://www.tattonpark.org.uk/what_to_see_and_do/gardens/garden_areas/japanese_garden.aspx
  • ^ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/step-into-a-rarity-an-anglo-japanese-garden-that-works-5gdvsq8wcwb
  • ^ Halen. p. 119
  • ^ http://www.puritanvalues.co.uk/newariv4.htm
  • ^ https://www.betaseries.com/en/episode/salvage-hunters-the-restorers/s03e06
  • ^ http://www.ks-architects.com/en/column/contents.php?id=7
  • ^ https://www.kreml.ru/en-Us/exhibitions/moscow-kremlin-exhibitions/charlz-renni-makintosh-manifest-novogo-stilya/#
  • Further reading

    External links

    Media related to Anglo-Japanese style at Wikimedia Commons


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anglo-Japanese_style&oldid=987904797"

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    This page was last edited on 9 November 2020, at 22:49 (UTC).

    This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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