高原に展く Kōgen ni hiraku (Spreading out on the high fields), Taniguchi Fumie

Artwork Overview

1910–2001
高原に展く Kōgen ni hiraku (Spreading out on the high fields), 1937
Where object was made: Japan
Material/technique: color; paper; ink
Dimensions:
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): each panel 182 x 362 cm
Object Height/Width (Height x Width): 71 5/8 x 142 1/2 in
Credit line: Museum purchase: R. Charles and Mary Margaret Clevenger Fund
Accession number: 2009.0021.a
Not on display

If you wish to reproduce this image, please submit an image request

Images

Label texts

Nature/Natural
Dressed in the latest fashion, a young athletic woman with short, uncoiffed hair strides up a mountain path, emerging into a sea of blooming azaleas. This work celebrates the “modern girl” or modan gaaru モダンガール, also known simply as moga. The Japanese equivalent to the American flapper, moga were independent woman who often worked to earn their own money; hung out in cafes where they smoked and drank; and were sexually liberated. The chic young women depicted hiking and enjoying the “wild” outdoors in this colorful folding screen, albeit shrouded in delicate flowering bushes, embody the fierce independence necessary to forge a career as a female artist in mid-20th century Japan. A native of Tokyo, Taniguchi Fumie studied at the Tokyo Girls Art School and in 1934 graduated from the Fine Arts division of the Bunka Gakuen—a woman’s university devoted largely to fashion design. She studied with renowned nihonga painter Kawabata Ryushi (1885–1966) and was one of only a very few woman who exhibited with his artist group known as the Blue Dragon Society (Seiryusha). This pair of screens was unveiled in the society’s 1937 exhibition in Tokyo when Taniguchi was only 27, and displays a range of techniques: thick mineral pigments typical of nihonga, western-style watercolor, and pencil used to sketch the composition.
Dressed in the latest fashion, a young athletic woman with short, uncoiffed hair strides up a mountain path, emerging into a sea of blooming azaleas. This work celebrates the “modern girl” or modan gaaru ??????, also known simply as moga. The Japanese equivalent to the American flapper, moga were independent woman who often worked to earn their own money; hung out in cafes where they smoked and drank; and were sexually liberated. The chic young women depicted hiking and enjoying the “wild” outdoors in this colorful folding screen, albeit shrouded in delicate flowering bushes, embody the fierce independence necessary to forge a career as a female artist in mid-20th century Japan. A native of Tokyo, Taniguchi Fumie studied at the Tokyo Girls Art School and in 1934 graduated from the Fine Arts division of the Bunka Gakuen-a woman’s university devoted largely to fashion design. She studied with renowned nihonga painter Kawabata Ryushi (1885-1966) and was one of only a very few woman who exhibited with his artist group known as the Blue Dragon Society (Seiryusha). This pair of screens was unveiled in the society’s 1937 exhibition in Tokyo when Taniguchi was only 27, and displays a range of techniques: thick mineral pigments typical of nihonga, western-style watercolor, and pencil used to sketch the composition.
Exhibition Label: "Nature/Natural," Feb-2011, Kris Ercums Dressed in the latest fashion, a young athletic woman with short, uncoiffed hair strides up a mountain path, emerging into a sea of blooming azaleas. This work celebrates the “modern girl” or modan gaaru モダンガール, also known simply as moga. The Japanese equivalent to the American flapper, moga were independent woman who often worked to earn their own money; hung out in cafes where they smoked and drank; and were sexually liberated. The chic young women depicted hiking and enjoying the “wild” outdoors in this colorful folding screen, albeit shrouded in delicate flowering bushes, embody the fierce independence necessary to forge a career as a female artist in mid-20th century Japan. A native of Tokyo, Taniguchi Fumie studied at the Tokyo Girls Art School and in 1934 graduated from the Fine Arts division of the Bunka Gakuen—a woman’s university devoted largely to fashion design. She studied with renowned nihonga painter Kawabata Ryushi (1885–1966) and was one of only a very few woman who exhibited with his artist group known as the Blue Dragon Society (Seiryusha). This pair of screens was unveiled in the society’s 1937 exhibition in Tokyo when Taniguchi was only 27, and displays a range of techniques: thick mineral pigments typical of nihonga, western-style watercolor, and pencil used to sketch the composition.

Exhibitions

Kris Ercums, curator
2011–2014

Citations

Blackledge, Lee, ed., Register. 8, no. 1 (2008-2009): 152.

Kris Imants Ercums & Maki Kaneko, editors, ed. Spencer Museum of Art Register: Modern & Contemporary Asian Art. Lawrence, Kansas: Spencer Museum of Art, The University of Kansas, 2019.