Art and Women's Liberation in a Newly Democratic Japan,with a Focus on Migishi Setsuko and Akamatsu Toshiko =“日本民主化中的美术与女性解放:以三岸节子和赤松俊子为中心”

Alicia Volk
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:日本在第二次世界大战中的失败代表了对艺术制度和实践进行彻底改革的机会,并重新思考艺术和艺术家在公共领域中的角色。他们用“民主化”来表达变革和革命的呼声。妇女是盟军占领日本的民主化政策最早和最明显的受益者之一。本文探讨的是,在日本历史上这一变革时刻,女性艺术家如何试图捕捉社会和政治变革的潜力,尤其是女性和整个社会。展览聚焦于战后早期日本最成功的两位女画家赤松敏子(Akamatsu Toshiko)和三石节子(Migishi Setsuko),揭示了不同艺术实践和政治信念的女性艺术家如何在公共领域推动女性解放,并参与艺术民主化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Art and Women's Liberation in a Newly Democratic Japan, with a Focus on Migishi Setsuko and Akamatsu Toshiko = 「日本の民主化における美術と女性の解放:三岸節子と赤松俊子を 中心に」
Abstract:Japan's defeat in the Second World War represented an opportunity for radical reform of the institutions and practices of art and for rethinking the role of art and artist in the public sphere. Calls for change and revolution were couched in terms of "democratization." Women were some of the earliest and most obvious beneficiaries of the Allied Occupation of Japan's democratization policies. This article asks how female artists sought to capture the potential of social and political change for women in particular and society in general at this transformative moment in Japanese history. Focusing on Akamatsu Toshiko and Migishi Setsuko, two of early postwar Japan's most successful female painters, it reveals how women artists across the spectrums of artistic practice and political conviction enacted women's liberation in the public sphere and engaged in the democratization of art.
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