
Cities
How the artistic life of three Japanese cities - Kyoto, Edo and Tokyo - shaped the country's attitudes.
Dr James Fox explores how the artistic life of three great Japanese cities shaped the country's attitudes to past and present, east and west, and helped forge the very idea of Japan itself.
Beginning in Kyoto, the country's capital for almost a thousand years, James reveals how the flowering of classical culture produced many great treasures of Japanese art, including The Tale of Genji, considered to be the first novel ever written. In the city of Edo, where Tokyo now stands, a very different art form emerged, in the wood block prints of artists such as Hokusai and Hiroshige. James meets the artisans still creating these prints today, and discovers original works by a great master, Utamaro, who documented the so-called 'floating world' - the pleasure district of Edo.
In contemporary Tokyo, James discovers the darker side of Japan's urbanisation, through the photographs of street photographer Daido Moriyama, and meets one of the founders of the world-famous Studio Ghibli, Isao Takahata, whose haunting anime film Grave of the Fireflies helped establish anime as a powerful and serious art form.
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | James Fox |
| Producer | Matthew Springford |
| Executive Producer | Richard Bright |
Broadcasts
- Sat 14 Apr 201802:10GMTBBC News except Latin America, North America, UK & UK HD
- Sat 14 Apr 201815:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sun 15 Apr 201809:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sun 15 Apr 201821:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sat 26 Jan 201909:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sat 26 Jan 201920:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sun 27 Jan 201902:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD
- Sun 27 Jan 201915:10GMTBBC News except UK & UK HD