Japanese arts and crafts: Mingei exhibit in San Diego, 1977 [005]

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Title Japanese arts and crafts: Mingei exhibit in San Diego, 1977 [005]
Photo Number Box 58, Mingei Japanese Mingei Exhibitions at San Diego Museum, 2
Description Photograph of "noren" (banner) at exhibit of Japanese folk art, Mingei Folk Arts of Japan Exhibit, San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California; Lennox Tierney was curator of exhibit
Creator Tierney, Lennox
Date 1977
Subject Museum exhibits--California--San Diego--Photographs; San Diego Museum of Art--California--San Diego--Photographs; Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego--California--San Diego--Photographs; Draperies, Japanese--California--San Diego--Photographs; Banners--California--San Diego--Photographs; Textile crafts, Japanese--California--San Diego--Photographs; Arts and crafts, Japanese--California--San Diego--Photographs; Folk art, Japanese--California--San Diego--Photographs; Tierney, Lennox; Japan; Art; Draperies
Keywords Mingei; Arts and Crafts; Arts & Crafts; Noren; Partitions
Collection Name and Number P0479 Lennox and Catherine Tierney Photo Collection
Holding Institution Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
Publisher Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah
Spatial Coverage San Diego (Calif.)
Caption on Slide Noren for Folk Arts exhibit, Mingei exhibit, SDMA, California.
Additional Information Image was scanned from color slide. Note: "The Mingei Foundation (later Museum) that specialized in the showing of decorative folk arts held its first exhibition "Mingei: Folk Art of Japan" in the Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego from January 1 to May 1, 1977."--Balboa Park History website. Note: "In 1978, Trustees changed the name of the Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego to The San Diego Museum of Art."--San Diego Museum of Art website. Note: "Noren are traditional Japanese fabric dividers, hung between rooms, on walls, in doorways, or in windows. They usually have one or more vertical slits cut from the bottom to nearly the top of the fabric, allowing for easier passage or viewing. Noren are rectangular and come in many different materials, sizes, colors, and patterns. Noren are traditionally used by shops and restaurants as a means of protection from sun, wind, and dust, and for advertising space. They are also hung in the front entrance to a shop to signify that the establishment is open for business, and they are always taken down at the end of the business day."--Wikipedia.
Type Image
Rights Management This material may be protected by copyright. Permission required for use in any form. For further information please contact the Multimedia Archivist, Special Collections, J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah.
Rights
ARK ark:/87278/s6t731cv
Digitization Specifications Original scanned on Nikon Coolscan 5000 and saved as 2700 ppi TIFF. Display image generated in CONTENTdm as JP2000.
Donor Tierney, Lennox; Tierney, Catherine
Setname uum_lctpc
ID 340350
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t731cv
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