The RIMPA ART Movement
The RIMPA ART Movement aims to encourage the essential values of life
and wants to revive the traditional Rimpa School through the eyes of the 21st
century. I have created Rimpa Art in Europe to promote excellence in all areas
of the world. Aestheticism, Spirituality Zen and Nature are the four key words
of Rimpa Art.
Historically, Japanese Art crossed the oceans and gave birth to JAPONISM
in Europe and the U.S. during the second half of the 19th century
and the beginning of the 20th.
Art Historians attach as much importance to Japonism as to the
Renaissance. Japonism allowed Japanese Art to permeate movements in Europe and
the U.S. such as Art Nouveau and Art Déco. It was a fusion of Oriental and Western Art. IN Europe,
Klimt is the most representative painter of Japonism and the Rimpa School,
which also include Impressionist and Post –Impressionist painters such as
Matisse, Monet, Manet, Degas, Bonnard Gauguin, Van Gogh, Renoir and the
Americans Whistler and, more recently, Sam Francis.
According to several Art historians, the Rimpa School ended at the turn
of the 20th century but this affirmation is debatable. During the
“RIMPA SCHOOL” show in 2004 at the Musee
N….. Andy Warhol was also considered as a descendant of this school in
the same way as Klimt, Matisse, Bonnard, Redon and Moser. At this show, the word RIMPA, until
then written in Japan in Japanese ideograms, was expressed in letters. This is
the moment which consciously recognized that RIMPA was not only limited to a Japanese School
but had become internationalized in Europe and the U.S.
RIMPA was often summed up in 3 words: Abstraction, Symbolism and
Decoration. Today I would like to encourage the search for Beauty,
Spirituality, the spirit of Zen, the
Recognition of the Love of Nature, while preserving the modernist and
vanguard nature of RIMPA by
frequently using Gold in its creations.
With today’s new technologies and the power of the media we can “meet”
more easily. In the name of the RIMPA ART MOVEMENT, I would like to invite
artists from all disciplines not only painters, designers, ceramists, but also
sculptors, architects, fashion designers, chefs, musicians, composers, dancers,
poets, writers, landscape designers and environmental specialists so that our
ideal might spread and become recognized.
In the 21st century with the frontiers between countries
gradually disappearing, the world needs to embrace the four principles of RIMPA
Art. I am convinced that the
values perpetrated for centuries in Japan will be more and more appreciated in
the world whatever the race and nation.
We invite you to share
these values and praise beauty.