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Tatsui Baba

There may not be many people today who recognize the name Tatsui Baba (1850 - 1888). Even fewer would know that in the summer of 1886 he fled...
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Cornucopia: Recent Acquisitions in Japanese Art
November 24, 2007 - Fall 2008
Philadelphia Art Museum Main Building, 2nd Floor, Galleries 241, 242, and 243
26th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway
Philadelphia, PA 19130


This exhibition showcases select works that celebrate the Museum's steadily growing collection of Japanese art. Among the most important objects featured is an exemplary seventeenth-century painting of a Deer Mandala (seen left). Rendered on silk and mounted as a hanging scroll, the piece celebrates the sacred animal messenger of the Shinto deities. A display of lacquer vessels made for both ritual and secular uses represents another significant area of collection expansion during the past few years. Likewise, a selection of contemporary works of art reflects the Museum's increasing interest in the extraordinary crafts of basketry, metalwork and ceramics that has guided acquisitions of pieces made by the living artists of Japan.

For more information, visit the Philadelphia Museum of Art website.

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