Azuchi Screens
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The Azuchi Screens ( ja, 安土屏風) are a set of six-
folding screen A folding screen, also known as pingfeng (), is a type of free-standing furniture consisting of several frames or panels, which are often connected by hinges or by other means. They have practical and decorative uses, and can be made in a variet ...
s depicting Azuchi Castle and its nearby town.
Oda Nobunaga was a Japanese ''daimyō'' and one of the leading figures of the Sengoku period. He is regarded as the first "Great Unifier" of Japan. Nobunaga was head of the very powerful Oda clan, and launched a war against other ''daimyō'' to unify ...
gifted them to Pope Gregory XIII, who displayed them in the Vatican collections, where they were admired by visitors. However, they disappeared from historical record. Their fate is unknown and they are considered to be lost. The screens must have been pivotal works in the development of Japanese folding screens. Variations on the name are ''Azuchiyama screens'' or ''Azuchi Castle screens'' ( ja, 安土城屏風).


History

The second half and the start of the seventeenth century saw the unification of Japan through the conquests of three great military leaders: Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and Tokugawa Ieyasu. This era is also called the Azuchi-Momoyama period, after the sites of the great castles of Nobunaga and Hideyoshi. The period saw a rapid development in Japanese castle construction: castles on a larger grander scale boasting a large stone basis, a complex arrangement of concentric
baileys Baileys Irish Cream is an Irish cream liqueur, an alcoholic drink flavoured with cream, cocoa and Irish whiskey. It is made by Diageo at Nangor Road, in Dublin, Ireland and in Mallusk, Northern Ireland. It is the original Irish cream, invente ...
, and a tall tower. But also, in the visual arts, such as the folding screens decorating the palatial residences. In 1579, Oda Nobunaga commissioned
Kanō Eitoku was a Japanese painter who lived during the Azuchi–Momoyama period of Japanese history and one of the most prominent patriarchs of the Kanō school of Japanese painting. Life and works Born in Kyoto, Eitoku was the grandson of Kanō Moto ...
(1543-1590), the most famous Japanese painter of his time, to create a pair of folding screens of Azuchi castle. It was a meticulously detailed birds-eye view of the fortress and its nearby town. In 1581, the Italian
Jesuit , image = Ihs-logo.svg , image_size = 175px , caption = ChristogramOfficial seal of the Jesuits , abbreviation = SJ , nickname = Jesuits , formation = , founders ...
Alessandro Valignano (1539 – 1606) visited Japan. Oda Nobunaga gifted him with the screens. The Jesuit conceived the idea of sending a Japanese embassy to Europe, and the screens became part of this plan. This became the so-called Tenshō embassy of 1582–1592, consisting of four young Japanese noblemen who left Japan to visit the Pope and the kings of Europe. Over India, Portugal and Spain, they traveled to Italy. In March 1585, the embassy arrived in Rome. In the afternoon of 3 April 1585, in the Papal apartments of the Vatican City, Vatican, they presented the screens to Pope Gregory XIII (1502-1585). Afterwards, they are set up for display in a gallery of the Vatican, probably the Galleria delle carte geografiche ('Vatican Gallery of Maps, Gallery of Maps'). In 1592, a Flemish people, Flemish artist from Leuven named Philips van Winghe made a few drawings copying details of Azuchi castle. This is the last historical record of the screens. They were major renovations of the gallery between 1592 and 1596, and between 1630 and 1637, but there is no record what happened to the screens. There is a faint hope that the screens will be discovered in a forgotten corner of the Vatican. It is also possible that a Pope has re-gifted them to someone else, and that they are hidden in a repository elsewhere in Europe. In the early 2000s, during a restoration of Eggenberg Palace, Graz, Eggenberg Palace in Graz, Austria screens were discovered depicting Toyotomi's Osaka Castle. In the 18th century, they were repurposed to decorate a room of the palace. Something similar may have happened to the Azuchi screens. However, a scholar raised that compared to Japan the climate is comparatively dryer in Italy, which may have caused the screens to disintegrate, which is also a possibility. The sketches by Philips van Winghe are also lost. However, the Italian Filippo Ferroverde made two woodblock print copies for Lorenzo Pignoria’s (1571-1631) addendum, ''Second Part of the Images of Indian Gods'', in the 1624, 1626, and 1647 editions of Vincent Catari’s (circa 1531-1569) ''Images of the Gods and Ancients''. These prints are still there and often discussed in studies on the Azuchi castle. Most likely, the Tenshō embassy also presented folding screens to the king of Spain in the court of Madrid, but they left no trace here at all.


Azuchi Screens Research Network

In 1984, the town of Azuchi conducted the first research project into the screens at the Vatican, but no information is found. Multiple investigation attempts were performed by a group of scholars and government officials between 2004 and 2016. This resulted in the 2016 creation of the Azuchi Screens Research Network, a group dedicated "to finding these priceless artworks, or in lieu of the real thing, discovering vestiges, descriptions, or other mentions of the screens that might offer new insights into the screens' composition, character, quality, meanings, or fate." The network sponsors two part-time researchers in Rome.


See also

* Golden Tea Room


References


Literature

* * * * * * *


External links

* * {{cite web, url=https://arts.unimelb.edu.au/enlightenment-romanticism-contemporary-culture/projects/azuchi-screens-research-network , title= Azuchi Screens Research Network at the University of Melbourne , website=arts.unimelb.edu.au , access-date=19 March 2023 Folding screens Holy See–Japan relations Kanō school Lost paintings