Aesthetics and Art Studies in Modern Japan
Aesthetics and Art Studies in Modern Japan
Aesthetics and Art Studies in Modern Japan
KATO, Tetsuhiro
Professor at
School of Humanities,
Kwansei Gakuin University
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Contents
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Introduction: Abstracts of Research Project ... 59
I. The Study of Aesthetics and Art Studies in Modern Japan (Summary of 1. in English) ... 61
II. Social Function of Aesthetics in Modern Japan: The Case of NISHI Amane ... 63
(Short summary of 2. in English)
III. E.F.Fenollosa and the Importation of Aesthetics into Japan (Original text in English of 3.) ... 64
IV. OTSUKA Yasuji and the Foundation of Art Studies in Modern Japan ... 70
(Short summary of 4. in English)
V. YASHIRO Yukio and the Cultural Policy of Modern Japan ... 71
(Short summary of 5. in English)
VI. Art History as Institution, and Its Objects of Research (Short summary of 6. in English) ... 72
Chronology (in Japanese, only in print version) ... 73
Bibliography (in Japanese, only in print version) ... 76
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knowledge", this research tries to relativize the then "aesthetics" which was inspired with a kind of
neoclassic view of art and was shared widely with many intellectuals everywhere in the world.
Of course, there may be lots of insufficiencies and inaccuracies. Art genres and countries to
compare with have been reduced. And it is also regrettable that the descriptions tend to be
concentrated to the academic mainstream aesthetics around University of Tokyo.
Overcoming
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9. REFERENCES
AUTHORS
TITLE OF ARTICLE
JOURNAL / VOLUME-NUMBER / PAGES CONCERNED / YEAR
- Tetsuhiro KATO
E.F.Fenollosa and the Importation of Aesthetics into Japan
Bigaku Ronkyu / 14 / 13-22 / 1999
- Tetsuhiro KATO
Art History as Institution, and Its Objects of Research
Bigaku Ronkyu / 15 / 1-18 / 2000
- Tetsuhiro KATO
OTSUKA Yasuji and the Foundation of Art Studies in Modern Japan
Jinbun Ronkyu / 51-1 / 1-12 / 2001
- Tetsuhiro KATO
The Study of Aesthetics and Art History in Modern Japan
(The Present, and the Discipline of Art History in Japan)
Heibon-sha / 32-42 / 1999
- Tetsuhiro KATO
Social Function of Aesthetics in Modern Japan: The Case of NISHI Amane
(Papers Commemorating the 111th Anniversary of Kwansei Gakuin)
Kwansei Gakuin University / 1-14 / 2000
- Tetsuhiro KATO
YASHIRO Yukio and the Cultural Policy of Modern Japan
(Lectures on Japanese Thought, Vol.4: Art)
Koyo-shobo / 69-84 / 2002
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establishment of an art history studies chair in German universities was a result of alternative
process of selection. In Germany's case, the establishment of a department of the study of art
history as a chaired position was a result of a variety of competing movements within the
philosophy department, particularly the harsh movement to separate and become independent from
aesthetics. In fact, there were quite a few instances where art history chairs were established as a
victory that signaled the abolishment of full professorships in aesthetics. On the other hand, in
Japanese universities, art history has maintained a peaceful coexistence with aesthetics and this
situation continues today. Of course, it is not important whether or not these departments have
shared titles of aesthetics and art history. In whatever form, the study of art history always entails,
in addition to the use of art as object of study, the inclusion of the study of aesthetics in its research.
The question then is, whether or not the study of art history in Japan has been able to sever its
relationship from the idealistic aesthetics that were introduced by Fenollosa and other early
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scholars in the field. Can't we then say that the study of aesthetics-which sees the existence of ,,art"
as a clear, universal form, loves the arts of antiquity "kobijutsu" and famous western paintings
"taisei-meiga" as "art," and is supported by universities and national policy aiming to educate its
human resources, and thus educating people in this knowledge-determined the characteristics of the
study of art history in Japan?
(Translated by Martha J. McClintock)
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This paper tries to make clear the social role Nishi intended
to confer on the aesthetics at that time, by analyzing his three texts ("Hyakuichi-shinron",
"Hyakugaku-renkan", "Bimyo-gakusetsu") where he referred to aesthetics for the first time in
Japan,
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"It is
by no means an accident, there must be some grounds for that.... And, to make clear this reason,
some speculative consideration cannot be avoided" (1).
To begin with, Fenollosa introduces three typical ways in which the fine arts have been defined,
giving his objections to each (2).
skillfulness as the determinant factor of fine art. Fenollosa, however, insists that skill has nothing to
do with art because it belongs to both art and non-art. The second theory can be called the
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"pleasure theory," and considers art to be that which brings us pleasure. According to Fenollosa,
this view is also inaccurate in that it confuses cause and effect: "We can say art is pleasant because
it is excellent. But we cannot say art is excellent because it is pleasant" (3). The third theory is
the "imitation theory," according to which art is that which imitates natural reality.
Fenollosa
argues that art is not always excellent when it mirrors nature by pointing out the fact that people
often like paintings better than photographs.
As we have seen, Fenollosa considers these three theories to be inadequate because they do not
touch on the inner relation, mentioning only exterior conditions. For Fenollosa, the notion of art
cannot be described merely by such physical or psychological approaches: "The notion of music is
not the same as the sound of music" (4).
form an intrinsic organic unity in our minds. Fenollosa calls this subtle unity of inner elements
"idea" (5), and explains that it is this "idea" that is the true meaning of art.
This definition of art seems fairly idealistic and formalistic. The audience of the lecture and
the early readers of its translation must have been troubled or tormented by this highly academic
doctrine.
In a sense, as T. Mori
points out (6), Fenollosa's statement precedes Woelfflin's "Principles of Art History" (1915).
After having made these theoretical preparations, Fenollosa applies them to concrete examples
from Japanese and Chinese paintings.
found in its harmonic state of form and subject (7). This form consists of three elements: line,
shade (light and dark), and color. Harmony of form and subject can be realized either by the
"synthesis" of the whole picture plane or by the "beauty" ("partial idea" produced by contrast and
order) of each section in the picture. Therefore, argued Fenollosa, if these factors are combined,
eight elements of artistic painting (from the "synthesis of line," the "synthesis of shade," to the
"beauty of subject") can be obtained. He also added two extrinsic elements (the "power of design"
and the "power of technique"); in this way, his aesthetics of painting was complete.
Though a more detailed explication must be omitted here, it is remarkable that Fenollosa
emphasizes total synthesis over partial beauty, form over subject, and line over shade and color. He
has, in fact, generalized the traditional European framework of academic notions about artistic form
and applied it to non-European painting. Fenollosa has no doubt here about the universality of his
ideas on fine arts.
For him, art is that which is sanctioned by this supreme "aesthetics," while
non-art is that which deviates from this definition. According to Fenollosa, it is when non-art
prevails due to ignorance or oblivion of the true meaning of art that true art declines.
b) Comparative Analysis
In the second part of his lecture, Fenollosa attempts a comparative analysis between Western
and Eastern art using his "true" notion of art. In contrast with the first, this section was understood
fairly well. Or, rather, Fenollosa's impassioned defense of Japanese traditional art so incited the
nationalistic mentality of his audience that it acquired great powers of influence. Consequentially,
this argument determined the basic tendencies of artistic thought in Japan for years to come.
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Fenollosa proposes five points of comparison (8): first, "the resemblance to the nature of the
Western oil painting"; second, "the shading effect of oil painting"; third, "the existence of contour
in the Japanese style painting"; fourth, "the thickness and variety of oil colors"; and finally, "the
complexity of Western painting and the simpleness of Japanese painting."
He stresses the
superiority of Japanese painting on all of these points. Behind this sympathetic vindication can be
perceived a kind of Japonisme or primitivism: an expectation that Western art will be saved from its
decay by non-European, native art.
Fenollosa's amicable outlook on Japanese art was, in fact, based wholly on nineteenth-century
European aesthetics. Proof of this can be found in his rejection of bunjin-ga (literati painting).
The reasons Fenollosa rejects the "artistic" nature of bunjin-ga and its promotion are as follows (9):
first, bunjin-ga is contrary to the true meaning of painting as art--it is impure in the sense that it
brings literary factors into painting; secondly, it has only a small range of subjects; and thirdly, it
easily invites unnatural mannerisms.
bunjin-ga can be discarded as non-art, as an enemy to the promotion of true art in Japan. It cannot
be denied that this indicates an intervention of Fenollosa's personal tastes and judgments, ones that
were shared by his contemporary intellectuals in the West.
Consequently, it may be inappropriate to characterize this section as a "comparative" analysis
because Fenollosa does not demonstrate the originality of Western or Eastern painting from a
neutral stance. Rather, with a strongly Western point of view, he "discovers" what meets the
Western taste and what sells well when exported to the Western world and advises his Japanese
audience to discontinue their support of "non-art" that does not please Western customers.
c) Concrete Proposals
In the last part of his talk, this young, 29-year-old professor of philosophy and politics offers
some brief but concrete suggestions on how to promote the fine arts in a newly born nation-state.
He mentions the establishment of art schools, the support of traditional Japanese painters, and the
enlightenment of the public (10).
Curiously, Fenollosa immediately denies the validity of the first topic, saying, "the appearance
of such a school is a sign of decline." He stresses that the "idea of nature cannot be taught": what
can be instructed is no more than "to copy the styles of past works of art." It may be surprising to
hear this opinion from one of the founders of the Tokyo School of Art. However, as Jutta
Stouter-Bender shows us (11), most instructors who came with artistic ambitions from Europe to
non-European areas adopted almost the same attitude. In their "workshops," they tried to teach
nothing, fearing contamination from the European tradition. The pupils cleverly comprehended the
predilection of their teachers and created excellent "works of art."
Art, there was a strange mixture of this type of workshop and another type of national academy.
Fenollosa's next advice is to give more production opportunities to Japanese-style ("Nihonga")
painters, which reminds us of the U.S. Federal Art Project in the 1930s. In the end, however, he
fears that "this policy might limit the spirit of freedom" of the artists. As in the case of art schools,
here again we see the aesthetics (or myth) of the inviolable imagination of genius.
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For his final suggestion, Fenollosa proposes the founding of an institute of art to sponsor the
eliciting, exhibition, and purchase of first-rate contemporary works.
recommends holding special exhibitions for antique paintings. He also emphasizes the need for
permanent institutions for both kinds of paintings; in other words, museums.
2. Appraisals of Fenollosa's Aesthetics
Two seemingly opposing attitudes developed in response to Fenollosa's lecture, as well as to his
later activities (which cannot be discussed here). The promoter of the speech, the "Ryuchi-kai,"
eagerly welcomed his arguments. The introduction added by "Ryuchi-kai" members on the
occasion of its publication speaks eloquently for this fact (12): "He is a scholar from the U.S. who
studied the profound truth of art.... He has been in Japan so long and knows so well about the
situations of traditional art in Japan that...we can easily understand his explanation about why our
country excels in art [above] all other countries."
This lecture, especially the second part, was surely agreeable to contemporary Japanese
political leaders as well. To be taught that traditional Japanese paintings as "art" are not inferior to
Western oil paintings not only healed the soul of a nation suffering from an inferiority complex but
also awakened consciousness and national pride in the Japanese people. As a result, Fenollosa
was to be used with his collaborator Okakura as a kind of symbol in later art promotion projects by
the Meiji government. Moreover, this "discoverer of the beauty of Japanese art" was exalted as a
benefactor who saved Japanese art in the midst of anti-Buddhist and anti-tradition movements. As
K. Hosaka points out (13), this myth, together with the legendary episode of the opening of the
doors of Horyu-ji Temple, was widely circulated; even after World War II, it was included in school
textbooks on "morals."
On the other hand, most scholars of aesthetics and art history have expressed relatively cool,
negative opinions. For example, researchers such as M. Yamamoto (14) and T. Kaneda (15), and
S. Takashina(16) say with almost a single voice that Fenollosa's arguments are "unoriginal," "too
simple," "general and conventional," or "lacking in particularity." Some, including E. Conant (17),
criticize that the arguments in this lecture are not only too abstract and speculative but also biased
and, in many aspects, contrary to fact.
These two attitudes are not necessarily opposed to one another. Rather, I think that they can
be thought of as two sides of the same coin. No doubt Fenollosa's aesthetics was banal and
erroneous; but perhaps it was for this very reason that his conclusions have been so highly
influential through the ages.
This is more easily understood when we take into consideration the later development of
academic aesthetics in Japan.
aesthetics in Japan was held in 1881 at University of Tokyo, just one year before Fenollosa's talk.
The following year, Fenollosa took over the class and continued to teach it through 1886. Though
various professors taught the class (Knox, Busse, Koeber, Otsuka), and its name was changed to
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"Aesthetics and History of Fine Arts" after Fenollosa left, the basic character of the course did not.
Along with more concrete courses on art history and music theory, abstract "aesthetics" remained a
mainstay at the university. In this way, aesthetics continued to function in Japan as a theoretical
study based on a classical understanding of art, in which art is distinguished from non-art. The
aesthetics of inner relations so emphasized by Fenollosa resulted in the separation of art from other
cultural activities and gave the study of art an aristocratic self-image.
The popularization of an autonomous notion of art was not found only in Japan. For example,
German sculptor Adolf von Hildebrand, active at almost the same time, states that, "paintings and
sculptures [have been] declining since the ancient ages." According to Hildebrand, this is because
"the progress of science and technology [has] made us lose the sensibility to art"(19). Despite
differing opinions in areas such as the theory of evolution or impressionism, Fenollosa actually had
quite a few things in common with German artists and intellectuals in the end of nineteenth
century: an outlook that laid emphasis on the "synthetic" structure of partial elements;
disappointment at the contemporary trends to imitate; the transference of this disappointment to a
nostalgia for classical antiquity; emphasis on the mentality of genius above and beyond technical
abilities; and a tendency to go back to the intrinsic "origin."
What Hildebrand's Munich, and Fenollosa's Boston and Tokyo had in common was that,
although (or rather because) these cities were developing areas, they were full of zeal for
civilization. Under such circumstances, there were various possibilities to incorporate aesthetics
into political strategy.
Fenollosa's aesthetic views on art: nostalgia for antiquity, for example, could play an important role
in absorbing more unpleasant aspects of the Bunmei-Kaika (Civilization and Enlightenment)
movement's radical progress.
Conclusion
It is simple to disregard Fenollosa's theory as merely an outmoded, commonplace, and
inaccurate aesthetics. We should not forget, however, that it was under the strong influence of
Fenollosa's artistic philosophies that the history of academic aesthetics developed in Japan.
What we need to do now is neither to praise nor to accuse. Instead, without oversimplification,
we should keep our eyes open to various possibilities, nurturing undeveloped ideas and notions that
lie hidden beneath mainstream trends. Through this process, we should be able to rethink the
meaning of art from the very point at which we stand today.
We do not need aesthetics as a discipline if it is confined to a limited repertoire, reluctant to
come in contact with the outer world. Nor do we need aesthetics if it regards particular tastes or
value judgments as self-evident, failing to try to place them in relative contexts. What we do need
from the field of aesthetics is critical theory that certifies freedom of thought. It is this kind of
aesthetics, I believe, that is indispensable for an analysis of the importation of aesthetics into
modern Japan.
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Notes
1. Fenollosa Bijutsu Ronshu (Ed. YAMAGUCHI, Seiichi), Tokyo: Chuo Koron Bijutsu Shuppan,
1988: 9. (For the original text by Fenollosa, see: Metadata, Akiko (Ed.), Fenollosa Shiryo. II,
Tokyo: Museum Shuppan, 1984: 49-66; TAKADA, Tomiichi, "Fenollosa no 'Bijutsu-Shinsetsu'
Kaidoku: Josetsu", Lotus 3(1983: 27-44; TAKADA, Tomiichi, "Fenollosa no 'Bijutsu-Shinsetsu'
Kaidoku: Zokuhen", Atomi Gakuen Joshi-Daigaku Kiyo 16(1983: 99-128; TAKADA, Tomiichi,
"Fenollosa no 'Bijutsu-Shinsetsu' Kaidoku: Shuko", Lotus 4(1984: 42-57.)
2. Fenollosa, op. cit., 10-12.
3. Fenollosa, op. cit., 10.
4. Fenollosa, op. cit., 15.
5. Fenollosa, op. cit., 14.
6. MORI, Togo. "Fenollosa ni okeru Spencer to Hegel." In: Lotus 7 (1987): 22, 25 ff.
7. Fenollosa, op. cit., 17-24.
8. Fenollosa, op. cit., 24-26.
9. Fenollosa, op. cit., 29-32.
10. Fenollosa, op. cit., 32-36.
11. Stroeter Bender, Jutta. Zeitgenoessische Kunst der 'Dritten Welt': Aethiopien, Australien
(Aboriginal), Indien, Indonesien, Jamaica, kenia, Nigeria, Senegal und Tanzania. Koeln: DuMont,
1991, 26-34.
12. Fenollosa, op. cit., 7.
13. HOSAKA, Kiyoshi. Fenollosa: 'Nihon Bijutsu no Onjin' no Kage no Bubun. Tokyo: Kawade
Shobo Shinsha, 1989, esp. 5f.
14. YAMAMOTO, Masao. "Fenollosa no Bigaku Shiso ni tsuite." Kokka 682, 683 (1949): 23-26,
44-54, esp. 52.
15. KANEDA, Tamio. "Meiji-ki no Bigaku Shiso ni Ataeta Fenollosa no Eikyo." Lotus 3 (1983):
20-26, esp. 21.
16. TAKASHINA, Shuji. Nihon Kindai Bijutsu-shi-ron. Tokyo: Kodansha, 1990: 189-224, esp.,
212, 215, 217.
17. Conant, P. Ellen. "Meiji Shoki Nihon ni okeru Bijutsu to Seiji: Fenollosa no 'Eikyo' o megutte
(Exoticism and Cultural Identity: A Reappraisal of Ernest Fenollosa). Koza Hikaku Bungaku 4,
Kindai Nihon no Shiso to Geijutsu II (ed. HAGA, Toru et al., ) Tokyo : Tokyo Daigaku
Shuppan-kai, 1974, 61-85, esp. 61 ff., 69, 76, 80.
18. Tokyo Daigaku Hyakunen-shi, Bukyoku-shi 1 (ed. Tokyo Daigaku Hyakunen-shi Henshu Iinkai).
Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppan-kai, 1986: 587-604, 677-685.
19. Hildebrand, Adolf. Die Form in der bildenden Kunst. Strassburg: Heitz & Muendel, 1893: 99,
111-117.
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In the lecture titled "Feature and Research Method of Aesthetics" which was
given in the same year, he criticized the conventional method of aesthetical inquiry based on the
ideological tradition, and emphasized the necessity of scientific and positivistic investigation of art.
This article tries to elucidate the historical significance of Otsuka's proposal from the following
three perspectives: "Catching up with the contemporary European situations", "Emerging of the
institutional logic", "Aesthetics as Culture".
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KATO, Tetsuhiro
Professor at
School of Humanities,
Kwansei Gakuin University
Copyright c. Tetsuhiro KATO, 2002
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