|
Home |
Event & Show ScheduleList of events.
Exhibit of Japanese Cloisonne
Phoenix Art Museum in Phoenix, Arizona
07/01/10 - 11/01/10Four pieces of Japanese cloisonne enamel from the collection of Waynor and Laurie Rogers are included in a "Best of Asia" exhibit in the Lyon Gallery at the Phoenix Art Museum. The objects are representative of fifteen pieces that were donated in honor of the museum's 50th Anniversary.
Exhibit of Japanese Woodblock Prints
Arizona State University Art Museum
08/28/2010 - 11/27/2010"Lasting Impressions: Japanese Prints from the ASU Art Museum" features 19th century through contemporary works drawn from the ASU Art Museum collection. The exhibit includes prints donated from the collection of Waynor and Laurie Rogers, Tom and Martha Carter, and Sidney Zarow.
Lecture:
Phoenix Art Museum
10/06/2010 - 10/06/2010The Phoenix Art Museum collection of Japanese cloisonné tells the story of Japanese cloisonné from the early beginnings of the craft in the 1830s until today. Using pieces from the collection, Waynor Rogers will talk about each phase of Japanese cloisonné craftsmanship, starting with early pieces and progressing through several phases to the present, illustrating the evolution of base materials and designs, with emphasis on the effects of the opening of Japan to the West, the Industrial Revolution, the Japanese aesthetic, and modern production.
Gallery Talk
Arizona State University Art Museum
10/19/2010 - 10/19/2010In conjunction with the exhibit "Lasting Impressions: Japanese Prints from the ASU Art Museum," Laurie Petrie-Rogers and collector Sherri Beadles will present “Interpreters of the East: Western Women Artists in Early 20th Century Japan.” This discussion will compare and contrast the work of four Western women artists who studied traditional Japanese woodblock printmaking in Japan in the first decades of the 20th century with the work of key Japanese artists of the “shin hanga” (new print) movement. Pioneers of Japonisme, the woodblock prints of these female artists would serve as an early cultural bridge between two worlds. 11:00am