
Art of the Edo Period (1615–1868)
Oct 1, 2003 · In urban Edo, which assumed a distinctive character with its revival after a devastating fire in 1657, a witty, irreverent expression surfaced in the literary and visual arts, giving rise to the Kabuki theater and the well-known woodblock prints of …
Edo period - Wikipedia
The Edo period (江戸時代, Edo jidai), also known as the Tokugawa period (徳川時代, Tokugawa jidai), is the period between 1600 or 1603 and 1868 [1] in the history of Japan, when the country was under the rule of the Tokugawa shogunate and some 300 regional daimyo, or feudal lords.
Edo Art in Japan - National Gallery of Art
Edo: Art in Japan, 1615–1868. The Edo period is one of the richest in the history of Japanese art, but only in recent decades has it become a focus of art-historical study in Japan.
A brief history of the arts of Japan: the Edo period
Artisans and merchants became important producers and consumers of new forms of visual and material culture. Often referred to as Japan’s “early modern” era, the long-lived Edo period is divided in multiple sub-periods, the first of which are the Kan’ei and Genroku eras, spanning the period from the 1620s to the early 1700s.
Art and Culture in the Edo Period | World History - Lumen Learning
Music, popular stories, kabuki and bunraku (puppet theater), poetry, literature, and art all flourished during the Edo period. A new style of painting and printmaking known as ukiyo-e emerged in fine arts.
Japanese art - Tokugawa, Edo, Ukiyo-e | Britannica
Feb 7, 2025 · Japanese art - Tokugawa, Edo, Ukiyo-e: At the death of the Momoyama leader Toyotomi Hideyoshi in 1598, his five-year-old son, Hideyori, inherited nominal rule, but true power was held by Hideyoshi’s counselors, among whom Tokugawa Ieyasu was the most prominent.
Paintings from the Edo Period — Google Arts & Culture
In the world of painting, highly original artists emerged whose works were informed by tradition yet were full of innovation and whimsy. Edo-period paintings in the collection of the Kyoto...
Edo period - Smarthistory
The Edo period saw an intensified circulation of visual vocabulary and aesthetic principles between mediums (paintings, ceramics, lacquerware, and textiles often shared the similar motifs) and crossing different registers of culture from design to popular culture to nostalgia for a romanticized pre-modern past.
Introduction | Investigating Japan’s Edo Avant Garde
Lesson plans leveled for elementary, middle, and high school students explore outstanding works of Edo art through video clips from the film, virtual image galleries, relevant articles, interview excerpts, and other educational resources.
Painting Edo: Japanese Art from the Feinberg Collection—Part One
Painting Edo is organized to reflect Edo period conceptions of lineage, offering a view of how “Edo” was articulated by and for its own creators and consumers. These compelling images...