Japanese artist Takahashi Hiromitsu creates dynamic, colourful prints showing exciting moments in kabuki, a traditional form of dance-drama. This is the second show in a two-part exhibition of his works in Gallery 29. Hiromitsu’s striking designs are not portraits of actual actors, but visualisations of famous kabuki roles. In kabuki, performers wearing elaborate costumes and make-up use stylised movement and song to enact melodramatic stories about love, loyalty and the clash between duty and emotion. The works recall Japan’s traditional ukiyo-e woodblock actor prints, but are made using a different technique – kappazuri, or stencil printing, originally used for dyeing kimono. This process is complex and labour-intensive and Hiromitsu is one of very few artists working in this way today. This exhibition showcases a second selection of these unusual prints from the Ashmolean's own extensive collection of Hiromitsu's work, generously presented by Philip Harris. Open 16 Feb 2024 – 23 Feb 2025 Gallery 29 Admission is FREE
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Exhibition (temporary)
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Beaumont Street, Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 2PH England
western-art@ashmus.ox.ac.uk
01865 278000
http://www.ashmolean.org/The Ashmolean Museum is open to the public Tuesday to Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays 10am–6pm. Admission to the collections is free, but there is a charge for some temporary exhibitions.
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