Kyoto: Capital of Artistic Imagination at The Met Fifth Avenue

 

Bugaku Mask (Sanju)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

 
 

KYOTO

Capital of Artistic Imagination

July 24, 2019 — January 31, 2021

 

Focusing on the main turning points in the cultural history of Kyoto from ancient to modern times, Kyoto: Capital of Artistic Imagination places special emphasis on the decorative arts. Over eighty masterworks of lacquers, ceramics, metalwork, and textiles from The Met collection, including a number of recently acquired works of contemporary art are showcased. A selection of over fifty paintings by masters of various schools are accompanied by a rare fourteenth-century suit of armor, splendid export lacquers made for the European market in the late sixteenth-century, exquisite eighteenth-century Noh robes, as well as austere tea wares with characteristic imperfections.

Heian-kyō, as modern-day Kyoto was once referred to, became the seat of the imperial court in 794 and remained the capital of Japan until 1869, when the court was transferred to Tokyo. The rich cultural heritage of this city was profoundly shaped by the presence of the emperor and aristocrats as well as high-ranking warriors, varied groups of artists, and literati working in the orbit of the palace. Buddhist temples, Shinto shrines, Noh theaters, workshops of painters and lacquer artists, ceramic kilns, textile shops, a flourishing tea culture, and bustling market districts, as well as supremely elegant architecture and gardens contributed to the advancement of the vibrant cultural life of Kyoto.

 
 
 

Exhibition Highlights

 

Guardian Lion-Dogs
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Blade for a Dagger (Tantō)
Blade inscribed by Rai Kunitoshi (Japanese, active ca. 1290–ca. 1320)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Scenes in and around the Capital
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Seiryū Gongen
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Shinto Deity as a Seated Courtier
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Nanban Coffer with Animals and Landscapes
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Guardian King of the Four Directions
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Guardian King of the Four Directions
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Illustrated Legends of the Kitano Tenjin Shrine (Kitano Tenjin engi emaki)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Zaō Gongen
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Deer Mandala of Kasuga Shrine
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Armor (Yoroi) of Ashikaga Takauji (1305–1358)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

“The Oak Tree” Tosa Mitsuyoshi (Japanese, 1539–1613)
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Dakini
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Sword Case (Katana-tsutsu) with Clematis and Checkered Pattern
© The Metropolitan Museum of Art