Abstract
Traditionally, nanban art has been seen as a simple product of exchanges between Japan, Portugal and Spain. The historiography tends to solely focus on artistic contributions of the Society of Jesus due to the foundation of a painting school in Japan. Thereby, the relevance of the Indo-Portuguese route in the cross-cultural history has been emphasized. However, the research advances of the last decades identify that nanban works consist of artistic inheritances from diverse regions of the world which were connected through the Portuguese and Spanish transoceanic routes. Similarly, Japanese nanban art influenced the artistic productions on the other side of the world. In summary, nanban art cannot be understood without taking into account its global implications. This paper clarifies the changes in epistemological understanding of nanban art, and its redefinitions through a historiographical review. This work also shows the important role of Spanish America in the artistic exchange mechanisms; these interactions occurred reciprocally. Therefore, the New World was one of the regions where Japanese art significantly influenced local productions. To exemplify this phenomenon, we address the influence of nanban art on the mural painting The great martyrdom of Japan in 1597 in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico.
Publisher
Universidad Nacional de Colombia
Reference117 articles.
1. Primary sources
2. Archives
3. Archivo Geografico de la Coordinacion Nacional de Monumentos Historicos del Instituto. Nacional de Antropologia e Historia (AGCNMH), Ciudad de Mexico-Mexico. Section: Catedral de Cuernavaca, Morelos (San Francisco).
4. Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu (ARSI), Rome-Italy. Collection: The Japonica-Sinica (Jap. Sin.) 20 I.
5. Biblioteca de la Real Academia de la Historia (BRAH), Madrid-Spain. Section: Cortes 9/2665.
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