Dubai Telegraph - 'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit

EUR -
AED 4.215497
AFN 73.462725
ALL 95.928008
AMD 435.38919
ANG 2.054756
AOA 1052.582784
ARS 1600.600423
AUD 1.630858
AWG 2.066139
AZN 1.945141
BAM 1.955979
BBD 2.326279
BDT 141.692979
BGN 1.962039
BHD 0.433553
BIF 3424.584958
BMD 1.147855
BND 1.474824
BOB 7.980635
BRL 6.038896
BSD 1.155037
BTN 107.10294
BWP 15.663573
BYN 3.520513
BYR 22497.960723
BZD 2.322978
CAD 1.576946
CDF 2605.631197
CHF 0.911885
CLF 0.02664
CLP 1051.929343
CNY 7.889266
CNH 7.920711
COP 4256.327205
CRC 539.455155
CUC 1.147855
CUP 30.418161
CVE 110.287592
CZK 24.507399
DJF 205.680052
DKK 7.471418
DOP 69.830084
DZD 151.950765
EGP 59.967169
ERN 17.217827
ETB 180.34737
FJD 2.546861
FKP 0.861664
GBP 0.862998
GEL 3.116388
GGP 0.861664
GHS 12.590579
GIP 0.861664
GMD 84.940928
GNF 10122.911489
GTQ 8.846812
GYD 241.629498
HKD 8.990386
HNL 30.569792
HRK 7.539054
HTG 151.373537
HUF 392.265145
IDR 19474.510287
ILS 3.585463
IMP 0.861664
INR 107.020733
IQD 1512.909921
IRR 1509429.508194
ISK 143.4018
JEP 0.861664
JMD 181.352159
JOD 0.81381
JPY 182.55142
KES 148.475308
KGS 100.377518
KHR 4625.330309
KMF 491.281897
KPW 1033.055826
KRW 1721.811368
KWD 0.352093
KYD 0.962447
KZT 557.17297
LAK 24783.804292
LBP 103445.652394
LKR 359.638737
LRD 211.353296
LSL 19.279293
LTL 3.389317
LVL 0.694327
LYD 7.370152
MAD 10.808114
MDL 20.13788
MGA 4810.404492
MKD 61.670198
MMK 2410.196717
MNT 4116.027501
MOP 9.32411
MRU 46.099259
MUR 53.386504
MVR 17.745724
MWK 2002.784752
MXN 20.448655
MYR 4.521977
MZN 73.357263
NAD 19.279293
NGN 1564.446099
NIO 42.502224
NOK 10.991514
NPR 171.379291
NZD 1.974781
OMR 0.441344
PAB 1.154937
PEN 3.944161
PGK 4.983433
PHP 69.075658
PKR 322.652705
PLN 4.280128
PYG 7465.179606
QAR 4.19976
RON 5.097049
RSD 117.451962
RUB 98.721522
RWF 1685.984912
SAR 4.309636
SBD 9.23477
SCR 15.640114
SDG 689.861145
SEK 10.788909
SGD 1.472715
SHP 0.861189
SLE 28.295101
SLL 24069.960762
SOS 660.089851
SRD 42.901089
STD 23758.283866
STN 24.507049
SVC 10.105422
SYP 126.87101
SZL 19.284631
THB 37.748358
TJS 11.046763
TMT 4.017493
TND 3.398596
TOP 2.763759
TRY 50.873187
TTD 7.829149
TWD 36.694288
TZS 2981.553918
UAH 50.79373
UGX 4344.890054
USD 1.147855
UYU 46.769581
UZS 14083.885094
VES 517.617056
VND 30177.111603
VUV 137.063567
WST 3.136193
XAF 656.145717
XAG 0.016464
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.102136
XCG 2.081445
XDR 0.816077
XOF 656.148576
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.84957
ZAR 19.355157
ZMK 10332.070799
ZMW 22.586595
ZWL 369.608886
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    22.895

    +0.28%

  • BCC

    -2.1000

    69.74

    -3.01%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    14.325

    -0.31%

  • NGG

    -1.6400

    85.76

    -1.91%

  • GSK

    -0.0050

    52.055

    -0.01%

  • RYCEF

    -0.7500

    15.85

    -4.73%

  • RELX

    0.1300

    33.99

    +0.38%

  • RIO

    -3.5200

    84.2

    -4.18%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    25.86

    +0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.1030

    12.22

    -0.84%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.93

    +0.17%

  • BTI

    -0.1100

    57.98

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    -0.3900

    188.03

    -0.21%

  • BP

    1.9750

    46.585

    +4.24%

'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit
'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit / Photo: Richard A. Brooks - AFP

'Female power': Japan erotic art destigmatised in new exhibit

Graphic depictions of enormous phalluses and acrobatic sex positions have long rendered centuries-old Japanese "shunga" art taboo, but a rare exhibition aims to prove the genre is a world apart from male-centred porn.

Text size:

Female pleasure instead takes centre stage at the Tokyo exhibition showcasing around 150 pieces of shunga -- an erotic form of "ukiyo-e" drawings and woodblock prints that flourished in Japan's Edo period, which began in 1603.

But so explicit is the art form in its depictions of nudity, genitals and sex that it was suppressed under Japan's post-shogunate westernisation drive in the late 19th century.

That stigma around shunga lingers more than a century on, with the genre often lumped together with commercial porn that objectifies women.

It is this misconception that the latest exhibition seeks to dispel.

On her recent visit from Germany, Verena Singmann, 38, said she found shunga strikingly different from modern-day porn that is "very much focused on male pleasure".

Detailed depictions of the vulva, oral stimulation for women and same-sex play with dildos, she said, suggested ukiyo-e artists' deep appreciation of sensuality and sexuality at the time.

"Instead of women just being an object that men look at... this is really showing female power through pleasure", Singmann, a spokesperson for a sex toy brand, told AFP.

Her colleague Miyu Ozawa, 30, agreed.

"You can see from the women's expressions that they were truly enjoying what they did," she said.

Ukiyo-e -- literally meaning "pictures of the floating world" -- depicted scenes from everyday Japan and often portrayed beautiful women and actors of "kabuki" traditional theatre, with the art made accessible to the public thanks to affordable woodblock prints.

The adults-only exhibition in Tokyo's Kabukicho red-light district is a rare attempt to spotlight shunga, famously described by a shocked US businessman in the mid-1800s as "vile pictures executed in the best style of Japanese art".

It was not until 2015 that an art show exclusively featuring shunga materialised in Japan, inspired by the genre's successful debut at the British Museum two years earlier.

That 2015 event in Tokyo has since helped shunga inch towards acceptance, with a few art shows held and a specialist museum established in central Japan's Gifu region.

- Seedy image -

Still, many Japanese museums "remain very much uncomfortable with these artworks", Mitsuru Uragami, one of Japan's leading shunga experts, told AFP.

Behind their discomfort is "the idea that shunga somehow runs counter to public order and morals", said Uragami, whose collection constitutes the ongoing exhibition.

Even in their heyday during the Edo period, shunga publications were at times forced to go underground, reaching their avid readership thanks to resourceful "kashihonya" -- or book lenders -- who went door-to-door with erotic books carefully hidden in their trunks.

Despite their seedy image, shunga represents the craftsmanship of some of Japan's finest ukiyo-e artists, such as Hokusai and Kitagawa Utamaro, encapsulating their humour and techniques.

Even with the absurdity of penises "as big as a face" or "near-impossible sex positions", many drawings manage to come off convincingly realistic -- proof of "their authors' top-notch artistic skills", Uragami said.

That little-known artistic value resonated with Maki Tezuka, chairman of Smappa! Group, which operates everything from bars to "host clubs" -- where men entertain women -- in Kabukicho.

"I thought shunga was similar" to the infamous Tokyo district synonymous with sex, booze and crime, said Tezuka, the project leader for the exhibition.

"Just like shunga is dismissed as Edo-period porn, Kabukicho is instinctively avoided as a 'dangerous' or 'illegal' place, despite a certain depth and humanity to it," he told AFP.

Reflecting that deep-seated prejudice against shunga, some businesses he approached refused to sponsor the exhibition.

Still, the 47-year-old is hopeful that it can inspire cultural interest in sceptics.

"I think their attention will gradually shift from genitals to the art's beautiful colour, which can hopefully ignite their interest in ukiyo-e itself, and eventually kabuki" theatre art, Tezuka said.

S.Al-Balushi--DT