The Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture

 

Lethal Beauty: Samurai Weapons and Armor

Sept. 1 – Jan. 30

 

Cultural News 2009 August

 

 

Detail from Scenes from the Tales of Heike, 17th century, pair of 6-fold

screens, ink, gold and colors on paper (Courtesy of the Clark Center)

 

 

2009 is the year when the samurai invaded California. Four museums in four different cities organize exhibitions related to the mythical Japanese warriors. Whereas the three spring and summer exhibitions in Santa Ana, Pasadena, and San Francisco present an overview of samurai culture, the fall exhibition "Lethal Beauty: Samurai Weapons and Armor" at the Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture at Hanford in Central Valley of California solely focuses on the beauty of weaponry and armaments. The exhibition will open on Sept. 1, and run through Jan. 30, 2010.    

 

The samurai are especially famous for their moral code, stressing loyalty, honor, and the mastery of martial arts. Like no other warrior class in world history, they continue to captivate the imagination and fascination of young and old.

 

Since the 12th century, the samurai warrior class served the nobility through periods of intense warfare and during peaceful times like the reign of the Tokugawa family from 1603 until 1868. In 1876, the samurai were officially disbanded and ordered to give up carrying swords.

 

Higher ranks of these samurai engaged not only in battles but also followed artistic and spiritual pursuits. Based on their sense for aesthetics and beauty, suits of armor became exquisite designs and, literally on top of them, flaunted fierce face masks and dramatic helmets, underlining the owner's superhuman image of power.

 

Swords were decorated with elaborate mountings reflecting the accomplished taste of the owner and the blades, created by highly refined craftsmen, are themselves unsurpassed artistic expressions of a lethal beauty. This duality of deadly weapons and artistic beauty is the focus of the fall exhibition.

 

On view will be more than 60 objects from different Californian collections, featuring superb suits of armor, outstanding helmets, face masks, sword fittings, and especially weapons like exquisite short and long swords, daggers, and matchlock rifles.

 

The Clark Center for Japanese Art and Culture is located at 15770 Tenth Ave., Hanford, CA 93230, (559) 582-4915, www.ccjac.org. 

 

Opening hours are 12:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesdays through Saturdays. The exhibition is closed on national holidays. General admission is $6.