Winter/Spring Exhibition Schedule for Freer and Sackler Gallery

OPENING FEATURED EXHIBITIONS

Peacock Room REMIX: Darren Waterston’s Filthy Lucre 

May 16, 2015-November 29, 2016

Media Tour Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Interviews Lee Glazer, associate curator of American art; Julian Raby, director of the Freer and Sackler Galleries; Darren Waterston

 

“Filthy Lucre,” an immersive interior by painter Darren Waterston, reimagines James McNeill Whistler’s famed Peacock Room, a sumptuous 19th-century dining room and icon of American art, as a magnificent ruin, literally overburdened with its own materials, creativity and tortured history. Opening at the Sackler Gallery, the room is the centerpiece of “Peacock Room REMIX,” an exhibition that probes the dramatic and occasionally unresolved tensions between art and money, ego and patronage, and the Peacock Room’s own exquisite beauty and contentious past.

“Peacock Room REMIX” offers visitors the only chance to experience Waterston’s creation alongside Whistler’s original Peacock Room, a permanent showpiece of the adjacent Freer Gallery of Art.

Lineage of Elegance: Tawaraya Sotatsu (WT)

October 24, 2015-January 31, 2016

Interviews Julian Raby, director; Jim Ulak, senior curator of Japanese art

The Sackler Gallery will be the only venue for the first major exhibition in the Western hemisphere centered on Tawaraya Sotatsu (ca.1570-ca.1640), a fountainhead of revered Japanese painting and design and one of the most influential yet elusive figures in Japanese culture.

Sotatsu’s work is instantly recognized by its bold abstracted style, lavish swaths of gold and silver and rich jewel tones. Much of his life, however, remains a mystery. How a working-class owner of a Kyoto fan shop transformed into a sophisticated designer with a network of aristocratic collaborators is still an enigma.

This exhibition is the first in-depth examination of this major Japanese artist, and convenes for the first time more than 70 of Sotatsu’s masterpieces from collections in Japan, Europe and the United States, along with homage pieces by later artists that demonstrate his long-ranging influence. Highlights include the historically significant screens “Waves at Matsushima” and “Dragons and Clouds,” along with fans, albums, hanging scrolls and paintings.

Museum founder Charles Lang Freer amassed several of Sotatsu’s most noted paintings and is widely credited with introducing Sotatsu to Western audiences. Due to restrictions in Freer’s will, the works cannot travel outside the Freer and Sackler Galleries, making this exhibition a watershed moment in our understanding of Sotatsu.   

OPENING

Zen, Tea, and Chinese Art in Medieval Japan

December 13, 2014-June 14, 2015
Interviews Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator of Japanese art; Louise Allison Cort, curator for ceramics
 
Zen Buddhism, tea, and ink painting–well-known expressions of Japanese culture–have their roots in Chinese arts and ideas brought to medieval Japan from the late 12th to the 16th century. By the end of that period, arts and customs from Song, Yuan, and Ming dynasty China had been assimilated into Japanese culture, emerging as Japanese practices such as chanoyu, the art of tea. In this exhibition, Chinese and Japanese paintings, lacquer ware, and ceramics illuminate this remarkable period of cultural contact and synthesis.

 

Oribe Ware: Color and Pattern Come to Japanese Ceramics

December 13, 2014-June 14, 2015
Interviews Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator for Japanese Art; Louise Allison Cort, curator for ceramics

Invented in Japan in 1605, Oribe ware introduced vivid pattern and color to a ceramics tradition that had previously favored somber, monochrome designs. Oribe ware vessels were used primarily for serving food and drinking tea, and their sprightly patterns with glossy black or brilliant green glazes made them a shimmering addition to 17th-century dining trays and tearooms. A major technological advance in ceramics–the Motoyashiki multi-chamber climbing kiln, which allowed potters to melt glazes to dazzling translucency–made this radically new appearance possible. This exhibition highlights the best selections of Oribe ware in the Freer’s collection, including two new acquisitions on view for the first time.

 

Chinese Ceramics: 13th-14th Century
December 20, 2014-January 3, 2016
Interviews Louise Allison Cort, curator for ceramics; Jan Stuart,
curator of Chinese art
 
Ceramic production during the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368) reflects the strength of the international market demand for Chinese wares. Notably, celadon-glazed vessels from Longquan competed with porcelain objects from Jingdezhen, painted with innovative decoration in cobalt pigment. A selection of Chinese ceramics from the Freer collection show highlights of Yuan ceramic styles and complement the exhibition Style in Chinese Landscape Painting: The Yuan Legacy.

Seasonal Landscapes in Japanese Screens

March 7, 2015-September 6, 2015

Interviews Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator of Japanese art

Featured for the 2015 National Cherry Blossom Festival March 20-April 12, 2015
 

Cherry trees bloom in this selection of folding screen paintings from the Freer Gallery. These landscapes from the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries combine ink painting techniques assimilated from China with the vibrant color and gold of traditional Japanese painting in a new style and grand scale, which was favored for residential and reception rooms. 

 

SPECIAL EVENTS

19th Annual Iranian Film Festival

January 9-February 8, 2015

Interview Tom Vick, curator of film

The festival is cosponsored by the ILEX Foundation and curated by Tom Vick, Freer|Sackler; Carter Long, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and Marian Luntz, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. All films are in Persian with English subtitles. Full schedule on asia.si.edu/films.

March 7, 2015

Interviews Massumeh Farhad, chief curator and curator of Islamic art; Simon Rettig, “Nasta’liq” curator and curatorial fellow
 
Dance, play, and feast your way into the Persian New Year at the Freer and Sackler Galleries. The museums’ seventh annual Nowruz celebration features free attractions for all ages–including Haft Sin table displays, “fire” jumping, chess and backgammon, cartoons from Iran, musical performances, stories by Xanthe Gresham, hands-on activities, and traditional Persian food. Made possible by a generous grant from Jahangir and Eleanor Amuzegar.
 

Cherry Blossom Celebration

March 28, 2015

Interviews Jim Ulak, senior curator of Japanese art; Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator of Japanese art

 
The Freer and Sackler Galleries celebrate the 2015 National Cherry Blossom Festival with a day full of Japanese art, anime and manga films, and family activities. The Sackler shop hosts a trunk show of vintage Japanese garments as well as a signing of the newly released Cherry Blossoms book, featuring artworks from the Freer|Sackler collections.

LAST CHANCE

Sylvan Sounds: Freer, Dewing and Japan

Through January 4, 2015

Interview Lee Glazer, associate curator of American art
Museum founder Charles Lang Freer’s taste for Japanese art grew out of his affection for American tonalist paintings. This intimate exhibition illuminates this connection by juxtaposing landscapes by American artist Thomas Dewing (1851-1938) with Japanese works that Freer acquired in the late 1890s, just after his first tour of Asia. Freer’s idealized notions of “old Japan” paralleled the nostalgic, pastoral aestheticism of Dewing’s atmospheric landscapes. Dewing often acted as Freer’s buying agent at the New York branch of Yamanaka and Company, helping his patron select Japanese prints, hanging scrolls, and screens that both reflected and affected his own artistic production. On view are such Edo-period works as Moon over a Moor alongside Dewing’s paintings, including the exhibition’s namesake, The Four Sylvan Sounds

The Religious Art of Japan

Through January 4, 2015  

Interviews  Jim Ulak, senior curator of Japanese art; Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator of Japanese art

Works from the Freer’s collection of Japanese religious art are on view in several thematically organized exhibitions. Buddhist iconography was first introduced to Japan from the Asian mainland in the sixth century. The complex belief systems and sacred cosmologies of diverse Buddhist sects have since continued to find expression in Japanese art. Buddhism brought to Japan a rich repertory of imagery, music, and liturgy that coexisted and interacted with the native Shinto belief system, in which the gods were closely associated with specific localities and natural features such as mountains, trees, and water. Buddhist sculptures on view include delightfully animated representations of the Guardians of the Four Directions and a serenely poised image of a bodhisattva. Also displayed are a group of masks used in temple dance rituals and a selection of paintings created by monk artists for Zen Buddhist temples.

Nasta’liq: The Genius of Persian Calligraphy

Through May 3, 2015 
Interviews Simon Rettig, exhibition curator and curatorial fellow; Massumeh Farhad, chief curator and curator of Islamic art

Nasta’liq: The Genius of Persian Calligraphy is the first exhibition of its kind to focus on nasta’liq, a calligraphic script that developed in the 14th century in Iran and remains one of the most expressive forms of aesthetic refinement in Persian culture to this day. More than 20 works dating from 1400 to 1600, the height of nasta’liq‘s development, tell the story of the script’s transformation from a simple conveyer of the written word into an artistic form. The narrative thread emphasizes the achievements of four master calligraphers–Mir Ali Tabrizi, Sultan Ali Mashhadi, Mir Ali Haravi and Mir Imad Hasani–whose manuscripts and individual folios are appreciated for their content as well as their technical virtuosity and visual quality. View full release and available images.

Through May 31, 2015 

Interviews Stephen Allee, associate curator of Chinese painting and calligraphy; Debra Diamond, associate curator of South and Southeast Asian art (organizing curator); David Hogge, head of the Freer and Sackler Archives; Carol Huh, associate curator of contemporary Asian art; Nancy Micklewright, interim head of public and scholarly engagement; James Ulak, senior curator of Japanese art; Ann Yonemura, senior associate curator of Japanese art
 
Travel shapes how we see the world. Long after a trip has ended, images made to guide, track, and represent travelers and their journeys continue to influence our views of other cultures and our own cultural identities. Featuring more than 100 works created over the past five centuries, The Traveler’s Eye: Scenes of Asia provides glimpses of travels across the Asian continent, from trade voyages to tourist trips. View full release and available images.
 

Through May 31, 2015
Interviews Stephen Allee, associate curator for Chinese painting and calligraphy
 
A tradition dating to the third century, landscape painting is one of the most outstanding achievements of Chinese culture. Key styles in this genre emerged during the Yuan dynasty (1279-1368) and are still followed today. While surviving works from the Yuan are rare, whenever possible, this exhibition includes the earliest work in the museum collection together with later examples tracing the characteristics and evolution of six of these styles. View full release.
 

Through June 7, 2015 

Interviews Carol HuhPerspectives curator and assistant curator of contemporary Asian art; Chiharu Shiota, internationally-renowned installation artist

Japanese performance and installation artist Chiharu Shiota installed a monumental yet intimate work in the Sackler pavilion. Haunted by the traces that the human body leaves behind, Shiota collets discarded shoes and notes to represent memories of lost individuals and past moments. View full release and available images

Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips

Through June 7, 2015 

Interviews Massumeh Farhad, chief curator and curator of Islamic art; Rocky Korr, researcher and retired manager of F|S collections; Julian Raby, director of the Freer and Sackler Galleries; Zaydoon Zaid, director and vice president of the American Foundation for the Study of Man and an archaeologist who excavated at Marib

Wendell Phillips, a young paleontologist and geologist, headed one of the largest archaeological expeditions to remote South Arabia (present-day Yemen) in 1950 and 1951. Accompanied by some of the leading scholars, scientists, and technicians of the day, Phillips was on a quest to uncover two ancient cities–Timna, the capital of the once-prosperous Qataban kingdom, and Marib, the reputed home of the legendary Queen of Sheba–that had flourished along the fabled incense road some 2,500 years earlier. Through a selection of unearthed objects as well as film and photography shot by the expedition team, the exhibition highlights Phillips’s key finds, recreates his adventures (and misadventures), and conveys the thrill of discovery on this important archaeological frontier. Unearthing Arabia: The Archaeological Adventures of Wendell Phillips is organized by the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery with generous support from the Leon Levy Foundation.  View full release and available images

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