HomeBibliography and Additional Sources

Bibliography and Additional Sources

Below, please find a list of bibliographical sources for "Japanese Phoenixes between the Momoyama and Edo Periods." This list includes hyperlinked wikipedia entries, hyperlinked jstor.org database articles, and MLA citations for various print sources. At the very bottom of this page, please find a list of sources that are Japanese in origin and are only accessible through the WorldCat database. 

 

Auspicious Motifs in Ninth – to Thirteenth – Century Chinese Tombs, Ellen Johnston Laign

 

Auspicious Oments in the Reign of the Last Empress of Nara Japan, 749 – 770, Ross Bender

 

Chen, Huaiyu. Kuan-yin: The Chinese Transformation of Avalokitesvara. Chu Ban. 2009. Print. 

 

Chinese Phoenix, the Fenghuang

 

Colorful Realm of Living Beings: Haiku Project by the National Gallery of Art

 

Doi, Tsugiyoshi. Momoyama Decorative Painting. New York: Weatherhill, 1977. Print.

 

Dumoulin, Heinrich. Zen Enlightenment: Origins and Meaning. 2nd ed. Noston: Shambhala Publications, 1979. Print. 

 

Edo Period Japan

 

Eichenbaum Karetzky, Patricia. Images of Asia: Guanyin. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Print. 

 

Graham, Patricia Jane. Faith and Power in Japanese Buddhist Art, 1600 – 2005. Honolulu: U of Hawai’I, 2007. Print. 

 

Hamada, Nobuyoshi. Nihon No Zuzō: Kachō No Ishō: Flower, Bird : Traditional Patterns in Japanese Design. Shohan. ed. Tōkyō: Pie Bukkusu, 2007. Print.

 

Hirabayashi, Moritoku. Twelve Centuries of Japanese Art from the Imperial Collections. Washington, DC: Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, 19997. Print. 

 

Ienaga, Saburo. Painting in the Yamato Style. New York: Weatherhill, 1973. Print.

 

Introductory Japanese Pronunciation Guide

 

Joel Cooner Gallery of Art

 

Kano, Hiroyuki, and Morio Kanai. The Age of Gold, the Days of Dreams in Praise of the Paintings in the Momoyama Period: The 100th Anniversary of the Kyoto National Museum Special Exhibition. Kyoto: Kyoto National Museum, 1997. Print.

 

Karetzky, Patricia Eichenbaum. Guanyin. Oxford, UK: Oxford UP, 2004. Print. 

 

 Kizaki, Satoko. The Phoenix Tree and Other Stories. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1990. Print. 

 

Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

Momoyama Period Japan

 

Nobuo, Tsuji, Kobayashi Tadashi, Arita Raitei, and Joe Price. Jakuchū Exhibition: A Reunion between the Śākyamuni triad and the Colorful Realm of Living Beings after 120 Years. Shōkokuji Jotekaku Museum; Nikkei Inc.; The Museum of Imperial collections: Dannomaru Shozokan; New Color Photographic Printing Ltd., 2007. Print.  

 

Levine, Gregory. Awakenings: Zen Figure Painting in Medieval Japan. New York: Japan Society; 2007. Print. 

 

Lippit, Yuko, Ota Aya, Oka Yasuhiro, and Hayakawa Yasuhiro. Colorful Realm: Japanese Bird-and-Flower Paintings by Ito Jakuchū. Washington, DC: National Gallery of art, Japan: the Imperial Household Agency and Nikkei Inc. 2012. Print. 

 

Phoenix in Fact and Fancy, Alan Priest

 

Rosenfield, Johon M., and Fumiko E. Cranston. Extraordinary Persons: Works by Eccentric, Nonconformist Japanese Artists of the Early modern Era (1580 – 1868) in the collection of Kimiko and John Powers. Ed. Naomi N. Richard. Vol. 3. Cambridge, Mass.. Harvard U Artmuseums, 1999. Print

 

Rosenfield, John M. "Japanese Studio Practice: The Tosa Family and the Imperial Painting Office in the Seventeenth Century." Studies in the History of Art 38 (1993): 78-102. Print.

 

Sanford, James H. Flowing Traces: Buddhism in the Literary and Visual Arts of Japan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton UP, 1992. Print. 

 

Stern, Harold P. Birds, Beasts, Blossoms, and Bugs: The Nature of Japan. New York: H. N. Abrams, 1976. Print.

 

Stone, Jacqueline Ilyse. Death and the Afterlife in Japanese Buddhism. Honolulu: U of Hawai’I, 2008. Print. The Avery Brundage Collection

 

Takeda, Tsuneo. Kano Eitoku. Tokyo: Kodansha International, 1977. Print.

The Identification of the Chinese Phoenix, M. U. Hachisuka

 

The following sources are Japanese in origin. They are not written in English and are not available for download, as far as I have found. However, all these sources can be requested through the WorldCat database. To search for these Japanese sources, use the roman-ji titles, the Japanese transliterations of these titles. The transliterations are listed here: 

 

Jakuchū hyakuzu: seitan sanbyakuen kinen

 

Motto shiritai Ito Jakuchū: shogai to sakuchin

 

Doshoku saie

 

Jakuchū: tokubetsu tenrankai botsugo 200 nen: bunkazai hogoho 50 nen kinen jigyo = Jakkuchu!

 

Jakuchū, Shohaku, Rosetsu

 

Jakuchū: tokubetsu tankan

 

Ito Jakuchū Saichufu: kogaku chosa hokokusho

 

Ito Jakuchū “Doshoku saie”: shuri jigyo hokokusho

 

Kiso no zufu: karakuri Jakuchū kazari

 

Jakuchū ten: kaiki Ashikaga Yoshimittsu 600 nenki kinen = Jakuchū