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Tuesday, August 12, 2025 |
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Evocative Creatures: Animal Motifs and Symbols Opens |
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Gibbons Playing in an Old Tree along the Banks of a Stream, Japanese; Early Edo period, c. 1630. One panel (detail) from a two-panel folding screen; ink on paper, 179 x 174.7 cm (painting proper). Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, Gift from the Collection of Millard L. and Margaret L. Meiss, 1995.6. Photo: Rick Stafford, HUAM, © President and Fellows of Harvard College.
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CAMBRIDGE, MA.-The Arthur M. Sackler Museum presents Evocative Creatures: Animal Motifs and Symbols in East Asian Art, on view through June 11, 2006. Although the landscape, with its towering mountains and rushing streams, has traditionally been the principal subject matter of East Asian painting, the smaller details of nature, including birds, beasts, and insects, have also occupied a place of distinction in the visual arts. By the Han dynasty (206 bc-ad 220), domesticated animals and fantastic creatures alike had entered the Chinese artistic repertoire, and in late Imperial times (the Ming [1368-1644] and Qing [1644-1911] dynasties), the phoenix and the dragon-ancient symbols of the yin and yang (female and male) forces of the universe-became official symbols of the royal house. Many of those mythical creatures came to be embraced by artists in Korea and Japan.
Through paintings, ceramics, sculptures, jades, and textiles from the permanent collections, this exhibition explores the symbolism and significance of a variety of real and fictitious animals in the arts of East Asia, and includes a section on animals that, according to Buddhist religious texts, serve as symbols for specific deities. Organized by Robert D. Mowry, Alan J. Dworsky Curator of Chinese Art.
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