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The Lyric Journey

The Lyric Journey

Poetic Painting in China and Japan

James Cahill

ISBN 9780674539709

Publication date: 08/01/1996

Creating paintings with poetic resonances, sometimes with ties to specific lines of poetry, is a practice that began in China in the eleventh century, the Northern Sung period. James Cahill vividly surveys its first great flowering among artists working in the Southern Sung capital of Hangchou, probably the largest and certainly the richest city on earth in this era. He shows us the revival of poetic painting by late Ming artists working in the prosperous city of Suchou. And we learn how artists in Edo-period Japan, notably the eighteenth-century Nanga masters and the painter and haiku poet Yosa Buson, transformed the style into a uniquely Japanese vehicle of expression.

In all cases, Cahill shows, poetic painting flourished in crowded urban environments; it accompanied an outpouring of poetry celebrating the pastoral, escape from the city, immersion in nature. An ideal of the return to a life close to nature—the “lyric journey”—underlies many of the finest, most moving paintings of China and Japan, and offers a key for understanding them.

Praise

  • This generously illustrated book has all the appurtenances required by scholars, taking its place in the thousand year, Oriental tradition of study and debate about the meaning, style and social role of painting. Yet its agreeable prose, based on the author’s lectures, reflects his interest in reaching the general reader. That’s fortunate, since Cahill’s comparison of Japanese and Chinese painting holds plenty of lessons for Westerners unfamiliar with Asian arts.

    —The Times-Picayune

Author

  • James Cahill is Professor of the History of Art at the University of California, Berkeley.

Book Details

  • 276 pages
  • 8 x 1034 inches
  • Harvard University Press

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