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T his exhibition showcases the Museum’s spectacular holdings of Japanese prints, books, and drawings from the 17th to the 19th centuries. These works are complemented by related works from the museum’s collections created by Japanese and Westerns artists into the 20th century. Shadows, Dreams, & Substance Ukiyo-e of Ryerson and Burnham Libraries http://www.artic.edu/aic/ February 28–May 7, 2012 Museum Hours Monday–Wednesday, 10:30–5:00 Thursday, 10:30–8:00 Friday–Sunday, 10:30–5:00 Admission Adults: $18 Children, Students, and Seniors (65 and up): $12 Children under 14: Free Members: Free This exhibition, catalog, and programming were made possible by the generous support of Ford Conservation of the works in this exhibition was made possible through a grant from The United States-Japan Foundation. The Art Institute of Chicago, 111 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60603-6404 The Floating World

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Page 1: Ukiyo-e Brochure

This exhibition showcases the Museum’s spectacular holdings

of Japanese prints, books, and drawings from the 17th to the 19th centuries. These works are complemented by related works from the museum’s collections created by Japanese and Westerns artists into the 20th century.

Shadows, Dreams, & Substance

Ukiyo-eof

Ryerson and Burnham Librarieshttp://www.artic.edu/aic/

February 28–May 7, 2012

Museum HoursMonday–Wednesday, 10:30–5:00

Thursday, 10:30–8:00 Friday–Sunday, 10:30–5:00

AdmissionAdults: $18

Children, Students, and Seniors (65 and up): $12

Children under 14: FreeMembers: Free

This exhibition, catalog, and programming were made possible by the generous support of Ford

Conservation of the works in this exhibition was made possible through a grant from The United States-Japan Foundation.

The Art Institute of Chicago, 111 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois, 60603-6404

The Floating World

Page 2: Ukiyo-e Brochure

The Floating World of Ukiyo-e: Shadows, Dreams, and Substance showcases the museum’s spectacular holdings of Japanese “Ukiyo-e” (translated as pictures of the floating, or sorrowful, world) and is the first public viewing of this important and previously unseen collection. Featured are selected Ukiyo-e prints, books, and drawings from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries and other related works from the Library’s collections created by Japanese and Western artists into the twentieth century. The museum owes its extensive holdings of Ukiyo-e prints and printed books to a host of different collectors, including Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes and President William Howard Taft. However, the most

extensive collection of Ukiyo-e at the Library was assembled by Crosby Stuart Noyes (1825-1908), an owner and editor-in-chief of the former Washington Evening Star. In giving the collection to the Library in 1905, Mr. Noyes expressed the hope that the collection would be “an illustration of the extraordinary variety in Japanese art and an instructive and timely insight into their history and culture.”In presenting this exhibition, the offers its visitors The Art Institute of Chicago the opportunity to see the beauty and the meaning that motivated Crosby Stuart Noyes and others to collect these materials.

“The artist Torii Kiyonaga has been described

as the preeminent leader in…the golden

age of ukiyo-e prints. He understood the

human body much more thoroughly than

other ukiyo-e artists, and by beautifying it he

created a healthy and noble type of his own.”

-Chie Hirano

浮世絵