Tang Center Lecture Series with Christine Guth

Title

Tang Center Lecture Series with Christine Guth

Wednesday, November 2, 2022 @ 4:30 pm

Location

McCosh 50

One of the tasks of art historians is to reflect on the cultural categories used in their discipline. In scholar Christine Guth's three lectures, delivered over the course of fall 2022, she will investigate meibutsu, a key word in the Japanese lexicon, with the aim of illuminating how it has been implicated in the formation of that country’s artistic canon. Meibutsu, literally, “famous things” or “things with a proper name,” have been examined narrowly as they relate to ways of perceiving, ordering, and interpreting specific objects in tea culture or as a form of commodity branding, but the broader cultural work that they carry out has not been addressed critically and systematically in an interdisciplinary framework. 

The Tang Center Lectures in this series will focus on the construction and dynamics of meibutsu and how their legacy informs the cultural specificity of Japan’s modern canon of National Treasures.

Lecture 1: Of Meibutsu and Masterpieces

Works of art designated meibutsu, “famous things” or “things with a personal name,” hold a critical place in the formation of Japan’s artistic canon. This lecture explores the meaning, development, and applications of this concept from the late fifteenth through the eighteenth century in the context of art collecting and the tea ceremony.

This lecture is part of a series. Guth will deliver the other lectures on the following dates: 

Lecture 2: Marketing Meibutsu

Monday, November 7, 4:30 p.m.

The term meibutsu was also used to refer to outstanding regional products, a usage that became especially widespread in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This lecture will focus on this genre of meibutsu and their significance in the development of a national awareness of and market for crafts made of lacquer, ceramic, bamboo, and other locally sourced materials.

Lecture 3: From Meibutsu to National Treasures

Wednesday, November 9, 4:30 p.m. 

Japan designates works of outstanding historical or cultural significance as National Treasures, and individuals who possess traditional craft skills as holders of Intangible Cultural Property or, more popularly, Living National Treasures. This lecture examines how meibutsu inform this classification system.

This program is organized by the P. Y. and Kinmay W. Tang Center for East Asian Art, in the Department of Art and Archaeology, and cosponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. 

A short, rounded vessel with a dark modelled patina with a light colored lid.
Chinese, Southern Song dynasty, Eggplant-shaped tea caddy named Tsukumo, 13th century. Seikado Bunko Art Museum, Tokyo. Photo after exhibition catalogue, Gotoh Museum, 1995