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Son of the author of the 'Three musketeers' lies beneath this grandiose grave in the cemetery of Montemartre in Paris.
Taken outside my home... when I clicked the shutter, I thought there were only two but when I saw the image there were three. The third one appeared from nowhere... reminds me of the great French movie "The Three Musketeers"... :)
And the great thing abt this pic is, I didnt have any macro or long range lens with me. This was taken with 17 - 40mm one....and that's why the image might not be the sharper as you'd have expected but still works for me.
Futonji (bed cover), 1870-1910
unrecorded maker
cotton, freehand paste-resist dyeing (tsutsugaki)
This richly-decorated bed cover was likely part of a bride's wedding trousseau. It features the mythical hōō bird, whose many feathers represent the marital virtues of truthfulness, propriety, righteousness, benevolence and sincerity. While the stencilled tstusugaki dyeing technique his Mingei characteristics - being handmade from natural materials and following prescribed forms - this object was not an everyday item and would have been used only for special occasions.*
From the exhibition
Art Without Heroes - Mingei
(March - September 2024)
Art Without Heroes: Mingei is the most wide-ranging exhibition in the UK dedicated to Mingei, the influential folk-craft movement that developed in Japan in the 1920s and 1930s. With works including ceramics, woodwork, paper, toys, textiles, photography and film, the exhibition incorporates unseen pieces from significant private collections in the UK and Japan, along with museum loans and historic footage from the Mingei Film Archive.
Mingei is a term coined by the Japanese philosopher and critic Yanagi Sōetsu (1889-1961) to mean ‘the art of the people’ and ascribes cultural value and aesthetic purity to traditional craft objects, unnamed makers and a simpler way of life. The exhibition considers Mingei both as a historical moment and as a set of principles that remain relevant to contemporary craft, manufacturing and material consumerism worldwide.
Like the British Arts and Crafts movement, Mingei was a response to rapid industrialisation. Mingei developed in dialogue with the work of William Morris and his contemporaries, within a specifically Japanese context that included the strong influence of Pure Land Buddhism. The exhibition also introduces the significance of Korean, Okinawan and Ainu objects to the Mingei movement, showing how these independent cultures contributed to what tends to be seen as a quintessentially Japanese aesthetic.
Divided into three parts, the exhibition starts with the 19th-century craft objects the Mingei movement looked to for inspiration. The second part of the exhibition focuses on the origin and evolution of the Mingei movement during the 20th century. Spearheaded by Yanagi, Japanese studio potter Hamada Shōji (1894-1978) and British studio potter Bernard Leach (1887-1979), it proposed an alternative to the rise of industrialism that accompanied the modernisation of Japanese society. Together Yanagi, Hamada and Leach, who described themselves as the ‘three musketeers’, championed the Mingei ideals of ‘art without heroes’, true beauty and traditional craft skills, leading a revival of interest in folk crafts.
The final section of the exhibition considers 21st-century iterations of the Mingei movement and modern re-interpretations of its core values. It shows how the term ‘Mingei’ has been reinterpreted and reclaimed by contemporary artists, including work by Theaster Gates which explores the spiritual and artistic dialogue between Black and Japanese craft traditions, a key concern of his practice.
[*William Morris Gallery]
Taken at the William Morris Gallery
Adria Vitlar as Milady and Adam Van Wagoner as D'Artagnan in THE THREE MUSKETEERS. Photo by Sandy Underwood.
Kevin Orton as King Louis XIII and John Feltch as Cardinal Richelieu in THE THREE MUSKETEERS. Photo by Sandy Underwood.