Abstract

This paper will give firstly a short overview of the position of Japanese fine art within the history of international exhibitions from the middle of the nineteenth century up to 1910, when the Japan-British Exhibition took place in London. Secondly, we will examine its Fine Art Palace in particular where both British and Japanese art was exhibited. Finally, we will investigate the relationship between British and Japanese fine art at that time. Japanese artefacts were already exhibited at the 1851 Great Exhibition, but not under its own banner, which finally happened in 1862, when the British diplomat Rutherford Alcock organised a Japanese section. This, though modest in its scope and quality, was hailed by many British artists and designers as a revelation and could be regarded as one of the trigger points of the subsequent Victorian Japonisme. Though Japanese craft was consistently successful at these international exhibitions, its fine art fared less well. Nevertheless, at the 1900 Exposition Universelle at Paris the Japanese showed the first comprehensive exhibition of Japanese fine art where the emphasis was on its historical overview. Compared to this, the Fine Art Palace of the 1910 exhibition exhibited Japanese contemporary fine art for the first time in equal terms with that of the British. The exhibition space was more or less equally divided and though a substantial amount of older art was included, the main emphasis was on contemporary art of both countries. This paper provides for the first time an analysis of the British section as well, which was more or less ignored in scholarly debates. It will also examine how far the exhibits represent the contemporary art scene of each country and finally will point out how a number of these works showed direct artistic relationships between the two nations. This paper was given in Japanese.

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