Japanese Art

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Japanese Art

Japan’s Art, although sometimes over looked has evolved through many

different periods. Its simplest forms in the Archaic period and last on its more complex

period the Ego Period. Even though some skeptics believe that Japanese art can not

compare to the art of the Greeks or Romans. Japanese Art yet simple is refreshing and

has left Japan with wonderful shrines, paintings and traditions. The periods of Japanese

art are the Archaic, Ask, Heian, Kamakura, Askikaga and the Ego periods. Each

Period has taken Japan to a new level of art.

Starting with the Archaic period, Japan was a prehistoric society where its art

consisted of well crafted vessels, vases, and tools. Most vessels and vases were

constructed to look like they were surrounded in rope but in reality it was part of the

ceramic and clay pieces. They lived in pit dwellings with thatched roofs on bamboo

stilts. The Japanese did however build shrines in this period. These shrines were

consisted of many buildings and were concentrated around a central axis. The

symmetrical system was off set by a gate and a building were only the deity could dwell.

The most famous of these Shrines is the Ise Shrine. This shrine is 55 yards by 127 yards and is completely fenced in. The Shrine is also made entirely out of wood! With the building of shrines the Japanese moved into a new period, the Asuka period. The

religion of the people changed to Buddhism which also cha...

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