Dance Drama of the Samurai
Transcription
Dance Drama of the Samurai
Noh Dance Drama of the Samurai November 17, 2012 – February 24, 2013 12 20. Yumi yawata (The Bow at Hachiman), 1926 From the series Nōgaku hyakuban (One Hundred Prints of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock Sheet: 14 ⅝ x 9 ⅝ 21. Himuro (Ice House), 1925/1930 From the series Nōga taikan (A Great Miror of Noh Pictures) Publisher: Seibi Shoten Color woodblock Sheet: 10 x 14 ½ 22. Kumasaka (The Robber), 1925/1930 From the series Nōga taikan (A Great Miror of Noh Pictures) Publisher: Seibi Shoten Color woodblock Sheet: 10 x 14 ¼ 23. Shakkyō (Stone Bridge), 1926 From the series Nōga taikan (A Great Miror of Noh Pictures) Publisher: Seibi Shoten Color woodblock Sheet: 10 x 14 ¾ 24. Higaki (Cypress Fence), 1926 From the series Nōga taikan (A Great Miror of Noh Pictures) Publisher: Seibi Shoten Color woodblock Sheet: 10 x 14 ¾ 25. Aya no tsuzumi (Brocade Drum), 1926/1930 From the series Nōga taikan (A Great Miror of Noh Pictures) Publisher: Seibi Shoten Color woodblock Sheet: 9 ⅞ x 14 ⅝ MODERN PRINTS 26. Yamaguchi Gen (Japanese, 1896–1976) Noh Actor, 1958 Color woodblock Artist’s proof, edition 1/5 Image: 32 ⅞ x 18 1/16 Sheet: 34 ½ x 20 Lent by Edwin and Ellen Reingold 27. Takahashi Rikio (Japanese, 1917–1999) Noh Play (B), 1960 Color woodblock Image: 22 11/16 x 16 ⅜ Sheet: 24 7/16 x 18 5/16 The Vivian and Gordon Gilkey Graphic Arts Collection 85.14.345 This exhibition is organized by the Portland Art Museum and curated by Maribeth Graybill, PhD, The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Asian Art. 28. Matsubara Naoko (Canadian, born Japan 1937) Nō Dancer, 1977 Woodblock, edition 34/50 Image: 14 ¾ x 14 ½ Sheet: 24 x 19 Lent by Edwin and Ellen Reingold Cover: 18. Tsuchigumo Inside flap: 1. Ayakashi The brantley Gallery Noh Dance Drama of the Samurai 14 Noh, the oldest traditional form of Japanese drama, is a complex and challenging form of theater. At once austere and luxurious, it brings the arts of dance, music, and choral chanting into intimate settings, where an all-male cast performs an ancient repertoire with enduring themes of great emotional intensity. While Noh is uniquely Japanese, it shares some characteristics with the theater of classical Greece, especially in its use of masks, choruses, and stories intended to have a transformative impact on audiences. This display of Noh masks, costumes, drums, and related prints is inspired by and presented in conjunction with the Museum’s special exhibition, The Body Beautiful in Ancient Greece. While Greek drama was performed in open-air theaters on hillsides for huge audiences, Noh was for most of its history the private theater of the highest-ranking samurai—aristocratic warriors who held positions of wealth, status, and administrative responsibility. Since the late fourteenth century, when the third Ashikaga shogun, Yoshimitsu (1358–1408), invited the father-and-son team of actors Kan’ami (1333– 1384) and Zeami (c. 1363–c. 1443) to perform at his villa in Kyoto, successive generations of military leaders patronized Noh troupes. Five centuries of samurai patrons shaped Noh drama into an art form that embodied their core beliefs and values rooted in Buddhist teachings. Many Noh story lines emphasize themes of salvation in the Buddhist sense; that is, freeing oneself from emotional attachments— such as love, jealousy, anger, and resentment— that ensnare the soul even after death. In a typical plot, the shite (protagonist) is the ghost of a fictional or historical character from the distant past. The shite first appears in disguise and converses with a traveling priest; as the dialogue unfolds, the real identify of the shite is discovered. In the second half of the play, the shite reappears in true form, as a ghost. As the chorus chants his confession, the shite mimes the action in a dance of highly stylized, decorous movements. Through the catharsis of narration and re-enactment, the tormented ghost finds release at last. The language of Noh, like its themes, is archaic, as the spoken lines often quote directly from poetry of the Heian period (794–1185), the courtly novel The Tale of Genji (written in the first decade of the eleventh century), or war tales, especially those focused on the struggle for power between the Taira and Minamoto clans in the twelfth century. For the samurai aristocracy, who often trained in Noh chanting and dance themselves, Noh became the portal to knowledge and symbolic possession of Japan’s literary and cultural heritage. After the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1868, the feudal system was abolished, and with it the samurai class that had supported Noh for so long. Following a brief period of precipitous decline, Noh resurged in the early twentieth century, thanks to the charisma of a few actors and moral support from the imperial family. Prints by Tsukioka Kōgyo (1869–1927), such as those seen here, were published in serial form in a leading magazine, where they helped to introduce Noh to the general public. Without changing its repertoire, language, or acting style, Noh gradually won fans among the educated middle class. Today it thrives as never before, as Japanese and non-Japanese alike flock to seasonal performances, take lessons in Noh chanting, participate in amateur performing groups, and study the libretti as literature. Noh theater is a multisensory experience, dazzling the eye and ear and engaging the mind and memory. On a sparsely furnished stage, visual splendor is created by the luxurious costumes, among the finest Japanese textiles ever made. Here, two chōken jackets from the Museum’s collection, garments worn for female dance roles and male aristocratic roles, are woven of diaphanous silk gauze brocade. The gleaming yellow in the brocade design is actual gold foil, laid on paper and woven into the fabric. Another touch of gold appears in three ko-tsuzumi drum bodies, all dating to the Momoyama (1573–1615) or very early Edo 3 CHECKLIST Dimensions are in inches. Height precedes width precedes depth. MASKS COSTUMES 1. Unknown artist, Japan Ayakashi (Vengeful Warrior) 17th century Gesso and pigment on wood with gilded metal eyes 8¼ x5¼ x3¼ Lent by Sydney L. Moss, Ltd. 7. Unknown artist, Japan Chōken, 19th century Gauze silk brocade with woven design of oxcarts and heartvine 42 ½ x 76 Museum Purchase: Funds provided by Marge Riley 2002.38 Yamaguchi Bidou (Japanese, born 1970) Gesso and pigment on cypress wood Courtesy of Target Stores 7 2.Ko-omote (Young Lady), 2002 8¼x5x2¾ 3. Shōjō (Sprite), 2002 8¼x5x2¾ period (1615–1868) and adorned with gilt lacquer designs. The smallest of the three drums in the Noh orchestra, the ko-tsuzumi is made from two taut disks of horsehide held apart by a barbell-shaped grip of hollowed-out cherry wood. The high-and low-pitched beats of the drum punctuate the dialogue throughout the play, setting the pace and heightening the drama. The masks of the Noh stage are unique in their power to evoke what the great playwright Zeami called yūgen, “a profound, mysterious sense of beauty...and the sad beauty of human suffering.” The oldest mask in the exhibition, dating to the seventeenth century, is of the ayakashi (strange fellow) type, used to portray angry warrior ghosts. The other five masks, representing a variety of roles, are contemporary works by Yamaguchi Bidou (born 1970), a young sculptor who is now winning accolades in Japan and abroad. Yamaguchi trained in traditional mask-carving techniques and spent more than ten years restoring older masks and making new masks for the theater. His recent work looks beyond Noh for inspiration, as he seeks to “materialize the ‘narrative’ hidden behind each face.” A selection of woodblock prints serves to illustrate Noh performance on stage. Two of these date from the Edo period, when the general public had access to Noh only on very rare occasions. Chikanobu’s humorous Townsmen Viewing Noh on a Ceremonial Occasion (1899), where the samurai are seated in orderly rows in a grand hall at Edo Castle while the invited merchants brawl in the courtyard below, makes it clear that the lower classes had yet to develop an appreciation for Noh’s rarefied language and sedate style of performance. Twelve prints by Tsukioka Kōgyo, produced between 1899 and 1930 as part of three extensive series devoted to Noh, perfectly capture the dichotomy of spare austerity and refined luxury found in this uniquely Japanese dramatic form. The exhibition concludes with prints by three leading modern print artists who respond to Noh with powerful abstract gestures: Yamaguchi Gen (1896–1976), Takahashi Rikio (1917–1999), and Matsubara Naoko (born 1937). The Museum is grateful to the lenders who have made this exhibit possible by generously sharing their collections: Irwin Lavenberg, Sydney L. Moss, Ltd., Edwin and Ellen Reingold, and Target Stores. 4. Imawaka (Young Man), 2002 8¼x5x2¾ 5. Hakushikijō (Old Man), 2002 16 x 6 x 2 ¾ 6. Ō-Beshimi (Tengū Demon), 2002 8¾x4x7 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 9. K ōsei Masauji (Japanese, dates unknown) Ko-tsuzumi drum body Late 16th–early 17th century Black lacquer and gold maki-e palm frond design on cherry wood 9 ⅞ x diameter 4 Lent by Sydney L. Moss, Ltd. 10. Unknown artist, Japan Ko-tsuzumi drum body Late 16th–early 17th century Black lacquer and gold maki-e waterwheel design on cherry wood 9 ⅞ x diameter 3 ⅞ Lent by Sydney L. Moss, Ltd. 11. K ō Kozaemon (Japanese, dates unknown) Ko-tsuzumi drum body Late 16th–early 17th century Black lacquer and gold maki-e pine needle design on cherry wood 9 ⅞ x diameter 3 ⅞ Lent by Sydney L. Moss, Ltd. PRINTS 12. U tagawa Toyoharu (Japanese, 1735–1814) Ukie nō kyōgen no zu (Perspective Picture of a Noh Performance) c. 1770 Publisher: Nishimura Yohachi (Eijudō) Color woodblock 9 13/16 x 14 15/16 The Mary Andrews Ladd Collection 32.190 Maribeth Graybill, PhD The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Asian Art 8. U nknown artist, Japan Chōken, 19th century Gauze silk brocade with woven cloud design 50 ⅞ x 87 Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Asian Art Council 2002.39 10 28 13. Yōshū Chikanobu (Japanese, 1838–1912) Kyū bakufu gotairei no setsu: chōnin onō haiken no zu (Townsmen Viewing Noh on a Ceremonial Occasion Hosted by the Former Shogunate), 1899 From the series Onko higashi no hana (Traditional Flowers of the East) Publisher: Egawa Hachi’emon Color woodblock (triptych) 14 ⅛ x 28 ⅜ Lent by Irwin Lavenberg T sukioka Kōgyo (Japanese, 1869–1927) Lent by Irwin Lavenberg 14. Ō hara gokō (Imperial Visit to Ōhara) 1899 From the series Nōgaku zue (Illustrations of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock with embossing Image: 8 ¾ x 13 Sheet: 9 ⅞ x 14 ¾ 15. T omoakira, 1900 From the series Nōgaku zue (Illustrations of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock Image: 8 ¾ x 13 Sheet: 9 ⅞ x 14 ⅝ 16. Oba ga sake (The Old Woman’s Wine), 1900 From the series Nōgaku zue (Illustrations of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock Image: 8 ⅞ x 13 ⅛ Sheet: 9 ½ x 14 ⅛ 17. Tankai, 1901 From the series Nōgaku zue (Illustrations of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock with metallic pigments and embossing Image: 8 ⅞ x 13 Sheet: 9 ⅜ x 14 ⅛ 18. Tsuchigumo (Earth Spider), 1922 From the series Nōgaku hyakuban (One Hundred Prints of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock Sheet: 14 ⅝ x 9 ½ 19. Sotoba Komachi (Komachi by the Gravepost), 1923 From the series Nōgaku hyakuban (One Hundred Prints of Noh) Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi Color woodblock Sheet: 14 ⅝ x 9 ⅝