an idea which brought about the disastrous devastation of
Corea, and the humiliating recall of Japanese troops from the peninsula on his
death in 1598.
Like their illustrious leader, the new nobility of that
period were men who had created their own ancestry with their swords; some were
recruited from the banditti of the land, and some from the piratical captains
who were such a terror to the people of the Chinese coast; and naturally, to
their uncultured mind, the solemn and severe refinement of the Ashikaga princes
was distasteful, because unintelligible. They, instigated by Hideyoshi, often
indulged in the subtle pleasures of the tea-ceremony, yet even this meant for
them rather the enjoyment of displaying their riches than any true refinement.
The art of this period is more remarkable, therefore, for
its gorgeousness and wealth of colour than for its inner significance. The
decoration of palaces in
the style of Ming, rich with decadent elaborateness, was
suggested to them by their intercourse with the Koreans and Chinese, through
the continental war.
New palaces were needed for the new daimyos, which, by
their size and magnificence, outshone the simpler dwellings even of the
Ashikaga Shoguns. This was the age of stone castles, whose plans were
influenced by Portuguese engineers. Of these, the foremost was that of Osaka, planned by Hideyoshi himself, the construction of which was assisted by all the
daimyos throughout the country, so as to make it impregnable even to the
military genius of Iyeyasu.
That of Momoyama, near Kyoto, was also a grand masterpiece
in this kind of construction, attracting the admiration of the whole nation by
its splendour and magnificence. Here the whole wealth of artistic decoration
was lavished to the utmost, so that had it survived the memorable earthquake of
1596 and subsequent
of pupils, worked on, painting the immense forests, the
birds of gorgeous plumage, and the lions and tigers that symbolised courage and
royalty, in the midst of all the magnificent turmoil of their patrons.
Tokugawa Iyeyasu, who came into power after the second
storming of the Osaka Castle in 1615, unified the administrative system
throughout the land, and put it, with his wonderful statesmanship, upon a new
régime of simplicity and solidarity. Alike in art and manners he strove to
return to the Ashikaga ideal. His court painters - Tannyu and his brothers,
Naonobu and Yasunobu, with their nephew, Tsunenobu - made it their aim to
imitate the purity of Sesshu, but failed, of course, to touch his real
significance. The age was alive with the virility of a race only just awakened
from sleep, evincing now for the first time the naive delight of a populace but
newly made free of the world of art. In this Japanese
society anticipates by two hundred years some of the most
striking features of the nineteenth century of Europe. The manners and loves of
the time were for display and not simplicity, and this, even as late as the era
of Genroku, a century after the establishment of the Tokugawa Shogunate.
The architecture of early Tokugawa followed mainly, as said
before, the characteristics of Toyotomi, of which fact we find examples in the
mausoleums of Nikko and Shiba, and in the palace decorations of the Nijo Castle, and the Nishi Hoganji Temple.
The breaking down of social distinctions, which was brought
about by the upheaval of the new aristocracy, permeated art with a spirit of
democracy hitherto unknown.
Here we find the beginning of the Ukiyoe or Popular School, though its conceptions at this time differed widely from those of the later
Tokugawa genre
school, where intense class-distinctions imposed their
limitations on plebeian conceptions. In this age of wild revelry, while
pleasure was yet sweet to the nation, freed from half a century of bloodshed,
whenever the people would vent their energies in juvenile playfulness and
fantastic images, the daimyos would join with the populace in unrestrained enjoyment.
Sanraku, the able successor and adopted son of Yeitoku;
Kohi, the great teacher of Tannyu; Yuwasa Katsushige, the so-called father of
the Ukiyoe School; and Itcho, noted for his panegyrics on the life of the day,
were all artists of rank in the highest line - yet they delighted to paint the
common scenes of life, with no feeling of lowering themselves, such as
high-class artists of the later Tokugawa had, and so this age of revelry and
pleasure led to the creation of a great decorative, though not a spiritual art.
The only school which stands out with
deep significance is that of Sotatsu and Korin. Their
pioneers, Koyetsu and Koho, drew from the dêbris of the decadent and almost
lost school of the Tosa, and tried to infuse into it the bold conceptions of
the Ashikaga masters. True to the instinct of the period, they expressed
themselves in rich colouring. They handled colour more as mass than as line, as
former colourists had done, and would bring out with a simple wash the broadest
effect. Sotatsu gives us best of all the spirit of Ashikaga in its purity,
while Korin, through his very ripeness, degenerates into formalism and posing.
We find in Korin's life a pathetic story of his sitting on
a brocade cushion whenever he painted a picture, saying, "I must feel like
a daimyo while I create!" showing that a touch of class distinction was
beginning to creep into the artistic mind even then.
This school, foreshadowing modern