-
Recent Posts
Categories
- American photography
- Art Fairs / Festivals
- Asian photography
- Awards
- Book reviews
- Collecting
- Contemporary art
- European photography
- Events
- Exhibition reviews
- Existentialist photo-ramblings
- eyecurious News
- Interviews
- Japanese photography
- Magazines
- On a lighter note
- One to watch
- Photo-books
- Photo-journalism
- Projects
- Tangents
Archives
-
RSS
Subscribe
Follow
Photo-Art Blogs
- A Photo Student
- American Suburb X
- Andrew Phelps
- Asian Photography Blog
- B
- BLDGBLOG
- Consumptive
- DLK Collection
- Ed Winkleman
- Exposure Compensation
- Fugitive Vision
- Heading East
- Horses Think
- Humble Arts Foundation
- insig.ht
- Japan Photo Info
- La Pura Vida
- Mrs Deane
- Not If But When
- Photo Sensible
- Photographers Speak
- Photoguide Japan
- Politics, Theory and Photography
- Shane Lavalette
- Street Level Japan
- The Exposure Project
- The Incoherent Light
- The Space in Between
- The Year in Pictures
- Toxico Cultura
- We Can’t Paint
Photobook Blogs
Photographer Sites
Webzines
Mount Fuji
Hokusai, 36 Views of Mount Fuji
Mount Fuji appears to be popping everywhere at the moment: aside from the draw it still has for Japanese artists (Naoki Ishikawa, Ken Kitano, Masao Yamamoto) it also seems to be rippling more and more through the foreign art landscape. The renowned ukiyo-e artist, Hokusai’s 36 Views of Mount Fuji inspired Jeff Wall’s A Sudden Gust of Wind. In 2007 Julian Opie reinterpreted the Japanese woodcut in a series of video installations and, with his Fuji project, Chris Steele-Perkins undertook a modern day equivalent of Hokusai’s journey. It is even starting to appear outside of Japan: in Alain Bublex’s Mont Fuji et autres ponts the mountain goes walkabout, turning up in the US and France. In fact it is so ubiquitous that it followed me into the metro the other day.
I can’t think of any other major landmarks from Asia that have clear symbolic meaning in the West. The Taj Mahal? The Great Wall of China? Although these are universally recognised, they don’t have the same aura of mystique or the same depth of symbolism as Fujisan. Can anyone out there think of any symbols that resonate on a similarly global scale through the art world?
Related posts: