Okakura Kakuzō
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Template:Nihongo, also known as Okakura Tenshin Template:Nihongo, was a Japanese scholar and art critic who in the era of Meiji Restoration reform promoted a critical appreciation of traditional forms, customs and beliefs. Outside Japan, he is chiefly renowned for The Book of Tea: A Japanese Harmony of Art, Culture, and the Simple Life (1906).<ref>'Ambassador of Tea Culture to the West' (biography of Okakura), Andrew Forbes and David Henley, The Illustrated Book of Tea (Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books, 2012).</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Written in English, and in the wake of the Russo-Japanese War, it decried Western caricaturing of the Japanese, and of Asians more generally, and expressed the fear that Japan gained respect only to the extent that it adopted the barbarities of Western militarism.
Early life and education
The second son of Okakura Kan'emon, a former Fukui Domain treasurer turned silk merchant, and Kan'emon's second wife, Kakuzō was named for the corner warehouse (角蔵) in which he was born, but later changed the spelling of his name to different Kanji meaning "awakened boy" (覚三).<ref>Horioka Yasuko, The Life of Kakuzo (Tokyo: Hokuseidō Press, 1963), 3.</ref>
Okakura learned English while attending Yoshisaburō, a school operated by a Christian missionary, Dr. James Curtis Hepburn, of the Hepburn romanization system. Here, he became well-versed in the foreign language but couldn't read Kanji, the characters of his homeland. As a result, his father got him to concurrently study western culture at Yoshisaburō and traditional Japanese in a Buddhist temple.<ref>Okakura, Kakuzō. 2022. The Book of Tea. Edited by Gian Carlo Calza. Rome: Officina Libraria, p. 158.</ref> After the abolition of the feudal system in 1871, his family moved from Yokohama to Tokyo. In 1875, Okakura joined them and won a scholarship to the Tokyo Institute of Foreign Languages. Quickly after, the school was renamed to Tokyo Imperial University.<ref>Okakura 2022, p. 159</ref> It was at this prestigious academy that he first met and studied under the Harvard-educated art historian Ernest Fenollosa.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Career
In 1886, Okakura became secretary to the minister of education and was put in charge of musical affairs. Later in the same year he was named to the Imperial Art Commission and sent abroad to study fine arts in the Western world. After his return from Europe and the United States, in 1887 he helped found, and a year later became director of, the Tokyo School of Fine Arts (東京美術学校 Tōkyō Bijutsu Gakkō).<ref name=":0" /><ref>founding of Tokyo University of the Arts</ref>
The new arts school represented "the first serious reaction to the lifeless conservatism" of traditionalists and the "equally uninspired imitation of western art"<ref name=":0" /> fostered by early Meiji enthusiasts. Limiting himself to more sympathetic aspects of art in the West, at the school, and in a new periodical Kokka,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Okakura sought to rehabilitate ancient and native arts, honoring their ideals and exploring their possibilities. When, in 1897, it became clear that European methods were to be given ever increasing prominence in the school curriculum, he resigned his directorship. Six months later he renewed the effort, as he saw it, to draw on western art without impairing national inspiration in the Nihon Bijutsuin (日本美術院, lit. "Japan Visual Arts Academy"), founded with Hashimoto Gahō and Yokoyama Taikan and thirty-seven other leading artists.<ref name=":0" />
At the same time, Okakura had opposed the Shintoist Haibutsu Kishaku movement which, in the wake of the Meiji Restoration had sought to expel Buddhism from Japan. With Ernest Fenollosa, he worked to repair damaged Buddhist temples, images and texts.<ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Okakura was a cosmopolitan who retained an international sense of self. He wrote all of his main works in English. Okakura researched Japan's traditional art and traveled to Europe, the United States and China, and lived two years in India during which he engaged in dialogue with Swami Vivekananda and Rabindranath Tagore.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Okakura emphasised the importance to the modern world of Asian culture, attempting to bring its influence to realms of art and literature that, in his day, were largely dominated by Western culture.<ref>Rupert Richard Arrowsmith, "The Transcultural Roots of Modernism: Imagist Poetry, Japanese Visual Culture, and the Western Museum System", Modernism/modernity Volume 18, Number 1, January 2011, 27-42. Template:ISSN.</ref> In 1906, he was invited by William Sturgis Bigelow to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and became the Curator of its Department of Japanese and Chinese Art in 1910.<ref name=":0" /> From 1886, he was a close friend of American artist John La Farge, to whom he dedicated The Book of Tea. Okakura also advised La Farge in his creation of murals for the Supreme Court of Minnesota.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Works
His 1903 book on Asian artistic and cultural history, The Ideals of the East with Special Reference to the Art of Japan, published on the eve of the Russo-Japanese War, is famous for its opening paragraph in which he sees a spiritual unity throughout Asia, which distinguishes it from the West:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Asia is one. The Himalayas divide, only to accentuate, two mighty civilisations, the Chinese with its communism of Confucius, and the Indian with its individualism of the Vedas. But not even the snowy barriers can interrupt for one moment that broad expanse of love for the Ultimate and Universal, which is the common thought-inheritance of every Asiatic race, enabling them to produce all the great religions of the world, and distinguishing them from those maritime peoples of the Mediterranean and the Baltic, who love to dwell on the Particular, and to search out the means, not the end, of life.<ref name="Okakura 1903">Template:Cite book</ref>
In his subsequent book, The Awakening of Japan, published in 1904, he argued that "the glory of the West is the humiliation of Asia."<ref name="Okakura 1904">Template:Cite book</ref> This was an early expression of Pan-Asianism. In this book Okakura also noted that Japan's rapid modernization was not universally applauded in Asia: ″We have become so eager to identify ourselves with European civilization instead of Asiatic that our continental neighbors regard us as renegades—nay, even as an embodiment of the White Disaster itself."<ref name="Okakura 1904"/>Template:Rp
In The Book of Tea, written and published in 1906, has been described as "the earliest lucid English-language account of Zen Buddhism and its relation to the arts".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Okakura argued that "Tea is more than an idealization of the form of drinking; it is a religion of the art of life".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
[Teaism] insulates purity and harmony, the mystery of mutual charity, the romanticism of the social order. It is essentially a worship of the Imperfect, as it is a tender attempt to accomplish something possible in this impossible thing we know as life.<ref>Okakura (2008), p. 3</ref>
None of this, he suggested, was appreciated by the Westerner. In his "sleek complacency", the Westerner views the tea ceremony as "but another instance of the thousand and one oddities which constitute the quaintness and childishness of the East to him". Writing in the aftermath of the Russo-Japanese War, Okakura commented that the Westerner regarded Japan as "barbarous while she indulged in the gentle arts of peace", and began to call her civilized only when "she began to commit wholesale slaughter on the Manchurian battlefields".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Okakura's final work, The White Fox, written under the patronage of Isabella Stewart Gardner in 1912, was an English-language libretto for the Boston Opera House. The libretto incorporates elements from both kabuki plays and Wagner's epic Tannhäuser and may be understood, metaphorically, as an expression of Okakura's hoped-for reconciliation of East and West.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name=":1" /> Charles Martin Loeffler agreed to Garner's request to put the poetic drama to music, but the project was never staged.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
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The Book of Tea
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Le livre du thé, 1927
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Translation of work in Esperanto.
Death
Okakura's health deteriorated in his later years. "My ailment the doctors say is the usual complaint of the twentieth century—Bright's disease," he wrote a friend in June 1913. "I have eaten things in various parts of the globe—too varied for the hereditary notions of my stomach and kidneys. However I am getting well again and I am thinking of going to China in September."<ref>Okakura to Priyambada Devi Banerjee, 28 June 1913, in Okakura Kakuzo: Collected English Writings, vol. 3, p. 207.</ref> In August, 1913, "Kakuzo insisted on going to his mountain villa in Akakura, and finally his wife, daughter and his sister took him there by train. For a week or so, Kakuzo felt a little better and was able to talk with people, but on August 25, he had a heart attack and spent several days in great pain. Surrounded by his family, relatives and his disciples, he passed away on September 2."<ref>Horioka Yasuko, The Life of Kakuzo (Tokyo: Hokuseido Press, 1963), 90.</ref>
Legacy
In Japan, Okakura, along with Hashimoto Gahō, a painter of the Kano School, has been credited with "saving" the Japanese Nihonga tradition of painting in the face of Western-style painting, or "Yōga", whose chief advocate was artist Kuroda Seiki.<ref>Kotobank, Hashimoto Gahō. The Asahi Shimbun</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, while accepting that with regard to Japan Okakura played a pioneering role in the practice of aesthetic hermeneutics, contemporary art scholars are no longer convinced of the "threat" posed by western painting.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> They are also critical of the manner in which Okakura, as "the founding father of the 'Myth of Asian Spiritualism'", shaped notions of an East-West dichotomy.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Outside Japan, Okakura influenced a number of important figures, directly or indirectly, who include Swami Vivekananda, philosopher Martin Heidegger, poet Ezra Pound, and especially poet Rabindranath Tagore and art benefactor, collector and museum founder Isabella Stewart Gardner, who were close personal friends of his.<ref>Video of a Lecture discussing the importance of Japanese culture to the Imagists, London University School of Advanced Study, March 2012.</ref> He was also one of a trio of Japanese artists who introduced the wash technique to Abanindranath Tagore, the father of modern Indian watercolor.<ref>"The First Watercolourist of Modern India", Sagnik Biswas in Watercolour Artist, June 2021</ref>
As part of the Izura Institute of Arts & Culture, Ibaraki University manages Rokkakudō, an hexagonal wooden retreat overlooking the sea along the Izura coast in Kitaibaraki, Ibaraki Prefecture, that was designed by Okakura and built in 1905. It is registered as a national monument.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Navi">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Books
- The Ideals of the East (London: J. Murray, 1903)
- The Awakening of Japan (New York: Century, 1904)
- The Book of Tea (New York: Putnam's, 1906)
See also
References
Additional sources
- "We Must Do a Better Job of Explaining Japan to the World". Asahi Shimbun, August 12, 2005.
- Benfey, Christopher. The Great Wave: Gilded Age Misfits, Japanese Eccentrics, and the Opening of Old Japan. New York: Random House, 2003. Template:ISBN.
- Bharucha, Rustom. Another Asia: Rabindranath Tagore and Okakura Tenshin. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006. Template:ISBN.
- Okakura Kakuzo, The Illustrated Book of Tea. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books. 2012. ASIN: B009033C6M.
- Westin, Victoria. Japanese Painting and National Identity: Okakura Tenshin and His Circle. Center for Japanese Studies University of Michigan (2003). Template:ISBN.
External links
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- Template:Gutenberg author
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- "History of Japanese Art" by Okakura Kakuzo (English translation)
- Kokka and the Early Neo-Bengal School Masters by Satyasri Ukil Template:Webarchive
- An Artist Remembered by Satyasri Ukil (Template:Webarchive)
- Forget Okakura by Niraj Kumar