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  • SARAH GREEN: This episode is supported

  • by Skillshare and our patrons, especially Indianapolis Homes

  • Realty.

  • You've seen this image before, a giant wave,

  • its distinctive curly claws arched and ready to pounce.

  • It's invoked when natural disaster strikes,

  • but also when it's time to sell beer, jeans, and sweatshirts.

  • It inspired Claude Debussy's orchestral work "La Mer,"

  • as well as a not insignificant number of tattoos.

  • It's an omnipresent image and one

  • used towards a variety of ends.

  • Good grief, it's even an emoji.

  • What is it about this image that continues to enthrall us?

  • Let's better know The Great Wave.

  • First off, the title is not The Great Wave.

  • And its subject isn't really a wave.

  • It's one of a series of woodblock prints called

  • 36 Views of Mount Fuji, made by the Japanese printmaker

  • Katsushika Hokusai between 1830 and 1833.

  • Long considered sacred by followers

  • of Shintoism and Buddhism, among others,

  • Mount Fuji is depicted from a variety of perspectives.

  • And the artwork in question is just one of them.

  • Its actual title translates to Under the Wave Off Kanawaga,

  • because under is where Mount Fuji is

  • nestled far in the distance.

  • Also under the wave are fishermen, just trying

  • to get home after delivering fish

  • to the city of Edo, rowing for their lives to escape the wave.

  • But the great wave, of course, dominates the composition

  • and has become an accepted title.

  • Born near modern day Tokyo in 1760,

  • Hokusai was a prominent ukiyo-e artist,

  • the name for the mass produced woodblock prints of the Edo

  • period, notable for their distillation of forms,

  • emphasis on line and pure color, and depictions

  • of hedonistic city life.

  • "Ukiyo-e" means floating world, referring to the ephemerality

  • of the fads and fashions of the time.

  • This was not stuffy high art, but images

  • available to a growing middle class for about the cost

  • of a bowl of noodle soup.

  • Hokusai was fascinated by the movement of water,

  • exploring the subjects on many occasions

  • throughout his career, and not just rough seas,

  • but a few calmer moments too.

  • In the 1830s, when The Great Wave was created,

  • Japan was largely shut off to the wider world,

  • due to the isolationist policies of the Tokugawa shogunate

  • then in power.

  • We can see Hokusai borrowing from Japanese Rinpa School

  • artists like Ogata Korin, especially

  • in the tentacle-like projections from his waves.

  • But Western realism was creeping into Japanese art

  • nevertheless, largely due to European engravings smuggled

  • in by Dutch traders.

  • The Great Wave betrays a clear Western influence--

  • the use of linear perspective, a low horizon line,

  • and the appearance of Prussian blue,

  • a synthetic pigment then very new to Japan,

  • hailing from, that's right, Prussia.

  • Thousands of copies of the Mount Fuji prints

  • were released within Japan, mostly bought as souvenirs

  • by an emerging market of domestic tourists

  • and those making pilgrimages to the mountain.

  • But in the 1850s, after Hokusai's death,

  • trade began to open up, and his work

  • was shown at the 1867 International

  • Exposition in Paris.

  • Japanese culture quickly became all the rage in Europe.

  • And ukiyo-e prints were admired and collected

  • by many, including Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Mary Cassatt,

  • and a number of artists who were heavily influenced

  • by their depictions of city life,

  • vivid colors, and what for them was a flattening of space.

  • In 1896, a tsunami hit northern Japan,

  • and news of its destruction spread worldwide.

  • It's been hypothesized that this event, coupled

  • with the Japonisme craze, helped propel The Great

  • Wave to international renown.

  • Although the print does not depict a tsunami,

  • in 2009, researchers identified it

  • as a 32 to 39 foot tall rogue wave

  • or what they call a plunging breaker.

  • It would certainly still be deadly, however.

  • And that's where we get to the real and obvious drama

  • of the picture.

  • Nature is large, and we are small.

  • This juxtaposition can be seen in the art of many cultures

  • at many different times.

  • But we have perhaps never seen it played out more clearly

  • and more distinctly than here.

  • Traditional Japanese landscapes of the time

  • put the viewer at a remove from the action.

  • But here, we are right up against this pending disaster.

  • Hokusai's contrast of near and far, and man made and natural,

  • heighten the tension and place us inside the narrative.

  • When Debussy composed "La Mer" in 1903,

  • he drew on his own childhood experience

  • of surviving a terrifying storm on a fishing boat,

  • as well as paintings by JMW Turner and Hokusai's print,

  • which he selected for the score's cover.

  • The image later illustrated a 1948 Pearl Buck novel

  • that tells the story of a young boy

  • from a Japanese fishing village who

  • loses his family to a tidal wave,

  • a post-World War II story of grief, but also resilience.

  • It's an image mobilized when disaster strikes,

  • as it was after the devastating 2011 earthquake and tsunami

  • off the eastern coast of Japan.

  • Scientists and empirical evidence

  • tell us that global average temperatures are rising,

  • with extreme weather events becoming

  • more frequent and more intense.

  • While the sea has always been a formidable opponent

  • for human kind and The Great Wave a useful illustration

  • for that relationship, its relevance

  • is likely to become even stronger.

  • But, of course, the image can be interpreted

  • in many different and less specific ways,

  • symbolizing a great many imbalance of power.

  • We don't know if our fishermen are going

  • to make it out of there alive.

  • It's a cliffhanger.

  • Even if you don't register the boats or Mount Fuji

  • and see the wave alone in its detached, emoji state,

  • it still holds us in and tells us quite forcefully

  • that big things are happening or are about to happen.

  • Unlike the GoPro views of surfers tunneling

  • through barrel waves, The Great Wave's story

  • is not one of mastery over nature.

  • It's notably called The Great Wave

  • and not the heroic fishermen who survived the rogue wave.

  • Other artists have capitalized on the power and theatricality

  • of waves as subject matter, but rarely in such a way

  • that we marvel at the talents of the artist,

  • instead of the spectacular beauty of the wave itself.

  • What's more, this image was meant

  • to be reproduced, not sequestered in one museum,

  • where only a few have the privilege of witnessing it.

  • While there are certainly numerous crimes

  • against this image perpetrated across the internet,

  • the crisp, graphic quality of the original woodblock

  • prints make it friendlier fodder for duplication

  • and interpretation.

  • When most of us experience the ocean,

  • this is thankfully not how we usually see it.

  • It's an incredibly improbable view.

  • It's a film still or screen capture

  • in the most dynamic, unstable, and unpredictable

  • of environments.

  • But it has nevertheless become our favorite stand-in

  • for the ocean, a way to isolate some fraction

  • of the vastness that covers 70% of planet Earth.

  • It's an icon.

  • It's the ultimate, most wavelike of all waves.

  • But it's also an entire story told simply

  • and succinctly and masterfully.

  • Whatever your great wave is made of,

  • you are undoubtedly under it and always will be,

  • until you're not.

  • I'd like to think Skillshare for sponsoring this episode.

  • Skillshare is an online learning community

  • with classes in design, business, photography,

  • and more.

  • Premium membership includes unlimited access to classes

  • and is available starting at $10 a month.

  • And you'll be able to learn from anywhere by downloading

  • the iPhone or Android app.

  • I've been really enjoying Ana Victoria Calderon's Modern

  • Watercolor Techniques for Beginners.

  • She's based in Mexico City, is an amazing artist,

  • and she shares her expertise in an accessible way.

  • Watercolor can be super intimidating,

  • but she makes it very doable and fun.

  • To get a two-month free trial and help support our show,

  • click the link in the description

  • or go to skillshare.com and use promo code artassigment at

  • check out.

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  • Special thanks to our grand master

  • of the arts, Indianapolis Homes Realty.

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SARAH GREEN: This episode is supported

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更好地瞭解大浪淘沙 (Better Know the Great Wave )

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    Jill 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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