Mingei

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Mingei, the Japanese folk art movement, was developed in the late 1920s and 1930s in Japan. Its founding father is Yanagi Soetsu (1889-1961).

Contents

[edit] Origins

In 1916, Yanagi made his first trip to Korea out of a curiosity of Korean crafts. The trip led to the establishment of the Korean Folk Crafts Museum in 1924, and the coining of the term mingei by Yanagi, potters Hamada Shoji (1894-1978) and Kawai Kanjiro (1890-1966). In 1926, the Folk Art Movement was formally declared by Yanagi Soetsu. Yanagi rescued lowly pots used by commoners in the Edo and Meiji period that were disappearing in rapidly urbanizing Japan. In 1936, Japanese Folk Crafts Museum was established.

[edit] Mingei Theory

The philosophical pillar of Mingei is “hand-crafted art of ordinary people” [minshu-teki kogei]. Yanagi Soetsu discovered beauty in everyday ordinary and utilitarian objects created by nameless and unknown craftsmen. According to Yanagi, utilitarian objects made by the common people are “beyond beauty and ugliness”. Below are a few criteria of mingei art and crafts:

  • made by anonymous crafts people
  • produced by hand in quantity
  • inexpensive
  • used by the masses
  • functional in daily life
  • representative of the regions in which they were produced.

Yanagi's book The Unknown Craftsman has become an influential work since its first release in English in 1972. Yanagi's book examines the Japanese way of viewing and appreciating art and beauty in everyday crafts, including ceramics, lacquer, textiles, and woodwork.

[edit] Criticisms of Mingei Theory and Orientalism

In recent decades, scholars such as Yuko Kikuchi and Brain Moeran have uncovered power relations and ultra-nationalism that lie at the core of the formation of Mingei theory. In 1927, Yanagi put forward the “criterion of beauty in Japan” [nihon ni okeru bi no hyojun] in The Way of Crafts [Kogei no Michi]. During the years of rising militarism in Japan, Yanagi Soetsu extended his application of the “criterion of beauty” to the crafts of the Okinawans and the Ainu in the Japanese peripheries, and to those of the colonies including Korea, Taiwan and Manchuria. Those scholars argue that Mingei theory, far from being an oriental theory, is a “hybridization” and “appropriation” of Occidental ideas such as that of William Morris (1834-1896) which Bernard Leach (1887-1979) introduced during his stay in Japan in 1909. Whereas Leach helped Japanese artists to rediscover their Oriental cultural origins in Occidental eyes, Japan applied orientalism to its own art and projected the same orientalism to the art of other oriental countries such as Korea. Yuko Kikuchi terms it “Oriental Orientalism”.

Yanagi’s “Korea and its Art” was severely criticized by Korean intellectuals as a “colonialist view of history” in 1974. Yanagi defined “beauty of sadness” [hiai no bi] as the “innate, original beauty created by the Korean race” [minzoku no koyu no bi]. Yanagi believed that the long history of foreign invasions of Korea was reflected in Korean art, and especially in its pottery, in the “sad and lonely” lines. Such a theory has been criticized by Korean scholars as the “aesthetic of colonialism”.

[edit] References and Further Reading

  • Kikuchi, Yuko. Japanese Modernization and Mingei Theory: Cultural Nationalism and Oriental Orientalism. London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2004.
  • Yanagi, Soetsu. The Unknown Craftsman: A Japanese Insight into Beauty. Tokyo, New York: Kodansha International, 1989.
  • De Waal, Edmund. “Homo Orientals: Bernard Leach and the Image of the Japanese Craftsman.” Journal of Design History, Vol. 10, No. 4, Craft, Culture and Identity (1997): 355-362.
  • Karatani, Kojin and Kohso, Sabu. “Uses of Aesthetics: After Orientalism.” Boundary 2, Vol. 25, No. 2, Edward Said (Summer, 1998): 145-160.
  • Moeran, Brian. “Bernard Leach and the Japanese Folk Craft Movement: The Formative Years.” Journal of Design History, Vol. 2, No. 2/3, (1989): 139-144.

[edit] See also

[edit] External link

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