Smart Salon: Meiji Dress and Self-Identity
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Smart Salon: Meiji Dress and Self-Identity

Join the Smart Museum of Art for an exploration of the intricacies of dress and identity during Meiji-era Japan.

By Smart Museum of Art

Date and time

Thursday, May 16 · 4:30 - 5:30pm CDT

Location

Smart Museum of Art

5550 S. Greenwood Avenue Chicago, IL 60637

About this event

  • 1 hour

Join Meiji Modern co-curator Chelsea Foxwell and and librarian Ayako Yoshimura for an exploration of the intricacies of dress and identity during Meiji-era Japan.

Participants are invited to look closely at key artworks in the exhibition to understand the political, economic, and social significations of kimono, hair style, and the influences of Western dress.

Panelists

  • Chelsea Foxwell is Associate Professor of Art History, East Asian Languages and Civilizations, and the College, and Director of the Center for East Asian Studies at the University of Chicago
  • Ayako Yoshimura is Japanese Studies Librarian at the University of Chicago

About Smart Salons

Smart Salons is an interdisciplinary conversation series that fosters dialogue between UChicago students, faculty, staff, and the South Side community at the intersections of art and culture. From close-looking in the galleries to panel discussions, artists, researchers, scholars, and practitioners are invited to help us think and reflect expansively about art, ideas, and stories that matter today.

For Meiji Modern, the Smart Salon series will feature experts in East Asian and Pacific art history, architecture, religion, and identity, transporting the public to the latter 19th century in Japan through intentional dialogue and a closer look at key artworks in the exhibition.

Image:
Mitsutani Kunishirō (1874–1936), Flowers, ca. 1910. Oil on canvas, 31 3⁄4 × 23 3⁄4 in. (80.6 × 60.3 cm). Private collection. Image Courtesy Sebastian Izzard Asian Art.

Organized by

The Smart Museum of Art at the University of Chicago is a site for rigorous inquiry and exchange that encourages the examination of complex issues through the lens of art objects and artistic practice. Through strong community and scholarly partnerships, the Museum incorporates diverse ideas, identities, and experiences into its exhibitions and collections, academic initiatives, and public programming. The Smart first opened in 1974. Admission is always free.