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  • Exhibit: Traditions Transfigured: The Noh Masks of Bidou Yamaguchi

Exhibit: Traditions Transfigured: The Noh Masks of Bidou Yamaguchi

  • Saturday, January 25, 2014
  • Sunday, April 13, 2014
  • CSU Long Beach / University Art Museum (Long Beach, CA)

Zõ-onna (Middle-Age Woman) 1998 Japanese cypress, seashell, natural pigment, urushi 8.27 x 5.31 x 2.76 inches Collection of Kelly Sutherlin McLeod and Steve McLeod © Bidou Yamaguchi

Mona Lisa, 2003 Japanese cypress, seashell, natural pigment, urushi 8.27 x 5.31 x 2.76 inches Collection of Kelly Sutherlin McLeod and Steve McLeod © Bidou Yamaguchi

Saturday, January 25 to Sunday, April13, 2014

(The museum is closed Monday and all university holidays)

The University Art Museum
CSU Long Beach
1250 Bellflower Blvd, Long Beach, CA 90840

The human face and its expressive potential have inspired artists around the world for millennia. Arguably, Japan's Noh theater provides an unparalleled domain for exploring emotion and representing the human countenance.

Today, Noh continues to inspire a dynamic dialogue between artists from Asia and the west. Expanding on this rich vein, Traditions Transfigured selects contemporary works by Noh mask maker Bidou Yamaguchi.

These masks apply the forms, techniques, transformative spirit, and mysterious elegance of Noh masks to iconic female portraits from the European art historical canon, and to Kabuki actor prints by Sharaku, Japan's enigmatic 18th century portrait master.

The exhibition catalogue (distributed by University of Washington Press) analyzes how Bidou's work radically extends Noh's emphasis on the transformation of souls across time and space into new cultural and physical dimensions.

By transfiguring both European and Japanese artistic traditions, Bidou's work merges past and present. More importantly, it allows contemporary audiences to uncover deeper dimensions of their own humanity. By imagining ourselves wearing different faces, we can forge deeper connections with others.

Admission
$4 General public

For visiting the museum, metered parking is available at Lot 17 in the campus.

For more information, visit www.csulb.edu/org/uam call (562) 985-5761 or email uam@csulb.edu
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