Event period : 11.07.2024 – 01.09.2024

Japanese ceramics

New acquisition – The Gisela and Fred Jahn Japanese Collection
Exhibition view, Japanese ceramics, 2024.
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)

About the exhibition

To mark the acquisition of the Gisela and Fred Jahn Japanese collection, Die Neue Sammlung is showing a selection of highlights.

One of the most important collections of modern Japanese ceramics and lacquerware has been acquired for Die Neue Sammlung (DNS) thanks to the support of Cultural Foundation of the German Federal States, the Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung and Förderverein PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne.

In this way, DNS’s ceramics section, which ever since its foundation in 1925 the exhibition hall has busily sought to expand, has now been emphatically strengthened as regards Asia. The same is true of lacquerware, of which DNS has to date only possessed a few items.

The Jahns as collectors have played a pivotal role in the reception of Japanese ceramics in Germany. Fred Jahn did so through his renowned gallery in Munich where in the 1980s and 1990s he arranged numerous exhibitions on the topic (shows that were influential far and wide) and later also on Japanese lacquerware. Gisela Jahn has had a similar impact through her scholarly work as an author and lecturer at the universities of Heidelberg and Berlin.

Thanks to their interest in this branch of Japanese arts and crafts, down through the decades they created what is one of the world’s most important collections of modern ceramics. The Jahns’ focus was on “modern traditional ceramics”, that style which emerged post-1950 as a result of the political effort to preserve endangered Japanese cultural assets. Many of the items in the collection were obtained during the couple’s travels to Japan and the related visits to the workshops of the various artists in question.

The current presentation on the 2nd floor of the rotunda provides a small foretaste of the major exhibition of the Jahn Japanese collection planned for 2027.

Photograph of a ceramic tea bowl by Japanese artist Kanzaki Shihō
Kanzaki Shihō, tea bowl (shino chawan), 1995/96 (sponsored by the Kulturstiftung der Länder).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a ceramic flower vase by Japanese artist Tsuji Seimei
Tsuji Seimei, flower vase (hanaire), 1990s (sponsored by the Kulturstiftung der Länder).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a ceramic flower vase by Japanese artist Kaneshige Michiaki
Kaneshige Michiaki, flower vase (hanaire), c. 1992 (on loan from the Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a ceramic vessel by an anonymous Japanese artist
Anonymous, Gefäß (tsubo), before 1573 (on loan from the Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a ceramic vessel by Japanese artist Ueda Naokata V
Ueda Naokata V, vessel for used water (kensui), 1985-95 (on loan from PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a ceramic flower vase by Japanese artist Kaneshige Makoto
Kaneshige Makoto, flower vase (hanaire), 1990s (on loan from PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
Photograph of a box with lid, decorated with mother-of-pearl and eggshells by Japanese artist Tokutake Toshiko
Tokutake Toshiko, Box with lid, decorated with mother-of-pearl and eggshells, c. 1996 (Die Neue Sammlung).
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (K. Mewes)
  • Curated by:

    Josef Straßer

  • Supported by:

    Kulturstiftung der Länder
    Ernst von Siemens Kunststiftung
    PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne e.V.

  • Logo von der Kulturstiftung der Länder. Schwarze Striche mit schwarzer Schrift. In Großbuchstaben steht der Name der Stiftung geschrieben.
  • The logo of the Ernst von Siemens Art Fund. It is a black frame with a white background. It says EvS and the name of the art fund underneath: Ernst von Siemens Kunstfonds.
  • The PIN. logo is brown and large. To the right of the lettering is Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne e.V: in gray capital letters.

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Where?

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