Thursday, April 16, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Thursday, April 16, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ftom Tanio Nakamura, CONTEM- PORARY JAPANESE - STYLE PAINTING, Tudor Publishing Co., 1969, $9.95. By ANYA GENDLER I eagerly looked forward to reading this book because there are only two other English lan- guage books which cover modern Japanese painting, and neither one in c lu d e s contemporary works. I was ,disappointed to find that the title, Contemporary Japanese-Style Painting, is mis- leading. Mr. Nakamura does not include the generation of artists who matured after World War II and who are, in my opinion, the most interesting because of both their close' proximity in time and the quality of their work. This youngest generation of mature artists went to New York, the mecca of the post- war art world, to do their ap- prenticeship with the abstract .* expressionists. In time, the per- spective afforded by distance and, possibly, th emphasis on the two-dimensionality of the painted surface of the post- painterly aesthetic led these art- ists to re-evaluate their native tradition and to look to Japan for motifs and principles of de- sign, if not actually to return there. It is interesting to remem- ber that the Japanese Ukiyo-e prints were what influenced late nineteenth'century Western art- ists, such as Manet, to initially explore the form~al aspects of two dimensional design. Mr. Nakamura confines him- self to artists born during the latter half of the nineteenth century and who matured art- istically during the first half of the twentieth century. He finds the sources of their work in the cross-fertilization of styl,. es and techniques with the of- ficial opening of Japan to the West at the beginning of the Meiji era. Actually, this diversity of Japanese, Chinese, and West- ern-inspired aesthetics, motifs, and techniques is an important I feature of Japanese painting* since the eighteenth century. Unfortunately the eighteenth and nineteenth century artists who were aware of the West' have, not been adequately stu- died, nor have their works been reproduced for popular exposure; this book reflects these limita- tions. It seems Mr. Nakamura preferred not to broaden his scope too far afield, having al- ready published a book on Jap- anese-Style Painting in the Meiji Period, and was forced to fill out his selection of plates with second and third rate works. % The Introduction is divided into the following sub-topics: ink to oiS The tria is of effective dissent What is Japanese-Style Paint- ing?, The Characteristics of Japanese-Style Painting, Tech-/ niques and Materials, and Birth and Progress of Modern Japan- ese-style Painting. The strengths of the text are Mr. Nakamura's discussion of painting tech- niques and materials, and the role of Ernest Fenollosa, Wil- liam Bigelow and lesser known Westerners in the revitalization of Japanese painting at the end of the nineteenth century when the government supported a Chinese oriented Academy and infatuation with the West sub- sumed all. Art historians often ignore the physical properties of the painted image and Mr. Nakamura's informative account is indeed welcome. The only difficulty of the text is that of language rather the artist's primary motivation was a greater interest in unin- spired subject matter rather than the challenge of native de- sign aesthetics or some sort of integration of the formal ap- proaches of China, Japan, and the West. Nakamura includes many examples of Bijin-ga, paintings of beautiful women, which substitute the traditional Ukiyo-e interest in bold two- dimensional composition and surface design of flat colors and textile pattern for a little West- ern shading and three dimen- sionality., Equally numerous are paint- ings which focus with a disturb- ing literalness on Western ex- otica such as a sphinx. The dis- tastefulness of these paintings is increased by the fact that they are reproduced on highly TRIALS OF THE RESIST- ANCE, New York Review/ Vintage paperback, 1970, $2.45 By JENNY STILLER When my friend Cary had to spend a week in Santa Rita P r i s o n following a Berkeley demonstration, s h e w a s sur- prised to find that she and her fellow activists were put into a different common cell from the other short-term prisoners. When she asked the matron if the warden was worried they would be bad influence on the hookers in the next cell, she was told, "I got my orders. They told us to keep the political prisoners separate from every- body else." Political prisoners. Damned if we hadn't thought they were guilty of trespass, The matron's frankness would never be found even in closed sessions of the higher echelons of our society. Judges, district attorneys, top corrections offi- cials, the President himself, to a man deny the existence of political crimes in this country. Instead, people are tried for possession of marijuana, tres- pass, contention, larceny, re- sisting arrest, refusing to obey orders, assaulting a police offi- cer, or even murder. There is also conspiracy, usually to com- mit any or all of the above. (Conspiracy is a clever little de- vice because it is almost impos- sible to deny, and conviction of it can greatly increase your sentence.) The crime with which a po- litical criminal is charged varies with the accused's race and so- cial status, and in part with what he has actually done. The state can bring charges against David Hilliard for al- legedly threatening the life of the President, or Bobby Seale for murder, because both gentle- men are black and, more to the point, both are Black Panthers. It can convict John Sinclair of possession of marijuana because the public will believe that a long-haired freak is automati- cally a dope user. When it goes after a Benja- min Spdck or a David Dellinger, however, the state must exercise more caution, and bring the ac- cused to trial for more blatantly political offenses. No one would believe that a respectable-look- middle-aged WASP would smoke pot or shoot a policeman-but the defendant himself will free- ly admit to organizing a demon- stration or urging young men to resist the draft. The indictment, however, is only half the problem. Unfor- tunately for the government, we have not yet got to the point where a D.A. can totally dis- pense with the Bill of Rights and so avoid the effort and ex- pense of bringing the accused to trial. The government is good at acting as if such trials are really the criminal prosecutions they pretend to be, but the de- fendants are rarely so obliging. There has been a rapid develop- ment over the past two years of the political trial as an art form, with the simultaneous de- velopment of a cadre of affi- cianados who watch the pro- gress of such trials with a cur- ious mixture of awe, delight, and trepidation. Trials of the Resistance, a collection of essays on some of the major political trials of the last three years, was designed to keep such people happy while they are waiting for the Panther 21 trial to reconvene, during the lull before all the books on the Chicago 7 come out. All of the nine essays which comprise the book were originally printed in The New York Review, and al- though they vary considerably in style, significance, and con- tent, they share the same point of. view-the semi-detached, in- volved, left - liberal - but - not - quite - radical ideology for which that magazine is famous. On the whole, the essays are intriguing and occasionally en- joyable, if you happen to dig political t r i a 1 s. Unfortunately, the book is rather unbalanced -heavy on the side of U.S. v. Spock et al-with five of the nine essays concentrating on that case. Perhaps because so very much has been written about the Spock trial, perhaps because it was inherently duller than most of the other political trials we have seen in the last few years. these essays all tend toward the tedious, with only the brief, . first-person account of Michael Ferber, "On Being Indicted," showing much originality or new perspective. In contrast, the other fourj essays are all well worth read- ing, if only because they deal with trials which received rela- tively poor critical coverage in the national press, and so are unfamiliar to most readers. Francine Du Plessix Gray's "The Ultra-Resistance" is the highlight of the book. Dealing with the actions of largely Catholic pacifists who have spe- cialized in raiding draft boards and then awaiting arrest, Mrs. Gray's article traces the growth of the "ultra-resistance" from its beginnings: "On a warm spring day in 1966, a nineteen-year-old Min- nesotan by the name of Barry Bondhus broke into his local draft board and dumped two large bucketfuls of h u m a n feces into a filing cabinet, mutilating several hundred I- A draft records in protest against the Vietnam d r a f t. The offender and his eleven{ brothers, sons of a machinist who had threatened to shoot anyone who attempted to in- duct his boys into the Ameri- can a r m y, had fastidiously collected their organic wastes for two weeks in preparation for the raid. "This primordial d e e d is known in the annals of the anti-war protest as The Big One action, in honor of Barry Bondhus' hometown, Big Lake, Minnesota. B a r r y Bondhus, who had calmly awaited arrest after his performance, served an eighteen-month sentence at Sandstone Federal Correc- tional Institution and c a m e home in March of 1968 to run his father's machine shop. Big Lake One was hardly men- tioned in the press, but Bond-' hus' was "the movement that started the Movement." Mrs. Gray devotes most of her essay to the trial of the Mil- waukee Fourteen, a group com- prising 12 Catholics (5 of them priests), most of whom decided to act as their own lawyers against a state charge of burg- lary, arson, and theft (they had burned some 10,000 draft files (with homemade napalm). The Fourteen's trial was some- thing of a prototype of the genre. It had all the usual ele- ments of a political trial-ar- guments over the rules of evi- dence, vocal spectators, attempts to explain motivations, the ul- timate conviction - plus a few unique little ironies of its own. Of these, the most delightful was the effect of the trial on the two prosecuting attorneys. Deputy District Attorney Allen Samson and his assistant, Har- old Jackson, Jr., were both 29 years old at the time of the trial, both anti-war liberals who sup- ported Sen. McCarthy from the beginning, both under attack from the right as being too left- ist for their positions. Samson, a Jew, had a kid brother at the University of Wisconsin who was active in Resistance. In the middle of the trial he requested "that the Court instruct the jury as to the legal reasons why certain evidence is not admis- sible. We request that it not be done in terms of the customary lawyer's nomenclature. . . . It is impossible for the State repre- sented by human beings to sit here any longer having it said that they believe in and of "A wacky, wildly funny, touching plea for the civil rights of the American Indian." -KIRKUS REPORT only 950 LVES A DRtUNKEN q N ,E eax c*fat'_ themselves that poverty and the war are irrelevant." "His voice broke. 'I just can't take it,' he said." T h e defendants expressed sympathy and suggested that he could always quit. He didn't. But Jackson, who is black, .did. Two weeks after the trial ended, he left his job at the district attorney's office to work exlusively with black civil rights cases. "Negroes in this country are being sent to jail like Jews to Auschwitz," he is quoted as saying. "There's not enough legal talent around to help them." Mrs. Gray is not the only ob- server to note the radicalizing effect of political trials upon their more Establishmentarian participants. Jessica Mitford underscored the political meta- morphosis of some of some of the Spock jurors, and Emma Rothschild notes the same phenomenon in her account of the Oakland Seven trial. The Oakland trial is some-f thing of a classic, if only be- cause the seven defendants were acquitted. (The State succeed- ed, however, in keeping them out of action for three months; and the trial costs bankrupted five of them.) In addition, this was the first recent political trial to attempt to use a con- spiracy charge as a means of in- creasing the penalty for an of- fense. (The seven organizers of the 1967 Stop the Draft Week were being tried for conspiracy -a felony-to commit trespass, a misdemeanor. This gambit is legal under California law, but is mercifully absent in most other states, and in the federal criminal code.> Miss Rothschild's account on the trial is episodic, but intelli- gent and concise. The writer has an agreeable stylistic habit which adds life to an otherwise prosaic narrative-the juxta- position of prosecution evidence with the prosecution of the war in Vietnam: "As in Vietnam the Oakland Police are helped in their pacification endeavors by Rev- olutionary Development Cad- res. At home they have a Tactical Unit. One officer testified: 'The purpose of the Tactical Unit was to practice a specific tactic which was crowdcontrol in this case. In classical crowd control you push to the right or the left . . . we used a wedge forma- tion .. .' Captain Fish, second in command of the wedge, said: 'We don't arrest under conditions of Clear . t h e Streets.' We don't take prison- ers under conditions of Search and Destroy." Meanwhile, the trial of the Chicago 12 will soon convene; others, no doubt, will follow. - - Ieurope: dept. STUDENT/FACULTY GRANT Program Special rates in European overseas travel for purchase, lease, & rental of cars. For details 'and brochure write: University Grant Dept., Auto Europe, 1270 Second E Avenue, New York, New York 10021. z ' I I than of scholarship.'The text was originally written in Jap- anese, and the English trans- lation reflects the fact that Japanese patterns of thought are organized differently than ours. Precise comments on Japanese qualities of design are inter- spersed under the section en- titled "Techniques and Mate- rials" rather than "What is Jap- ese-Style Painting?" A List of Plates in order by artist and a Glosary of Japanese terms are included for easy reference. The Plates are preceded by a short biography and a photo of each artist. Mr. Nakamuras connoisseur- ship is disappointing, consider- ing he has been deputy curator of the Painting Section of the Tokyo National Museum and is a member of the Japanese Sec- tion of the Association of In- ternational Art Critics. The ma- jo ity of paintings indicate that Eunuchs and glossed paper and the colors as- sume a garishness akin to a pastel refrigerator. It may be that Mr. Nakamura's book is representative of the range of paintings of the period he cov- ers, but some attention to dis- stinctions of quality and tradi- tion of the works would have been preferable. It should be remembered that it took American artists until the 1940's to assimilate and free themselves of the overwhelming influence of the European a v a n t-g a r d e. Contemporary Japanese-Style Painting reflects the efforts of the older genera- tion of modern Japanese artists to perpetuate tradition, on the one hand, and to try out for- eign styles, on the other. A few of the artists who paint closer to their native tradition of fine art, such as Hishida Shuso and Hayami Gyoshu, are very suc- cessful. politics scattered. The purpose of this book is to make portions of Pro- fessor Mitamura's study avail- able to the general public; the book makes no claim of consti- tuting a definitive work on the topic. Nevertheless, scattered through the book are snippets of tantalizing information to suit every interest. For those simply morbidly curious, Professor Mi- tamura describes methods of- castration as well as the physi- cal and emotional characteris- tics of the eunuch. The non- Chinese specialist in history or sociology may be attracted by such aspects of history or so- cial change as those mentioned above. The reader, however, should familiarize himself with names and dates of Chinese dy- nasties and of major historical figures before he reads this book because, the author frequently skips back and forth from one e'a to another without indicat- ing the time period involved (no historical or chronological chart is provided in the book itself). Taisuke Mitamura, CHIN- ESE EUNUCHS, THE STRUCTURE OF INTIMATE POLITICS. Translated by Charles A. Pomeroy. Charles E. Tuttle Company, 1970. $3.75. By E. J. LAING In this small, slim volume, a noted Japanese historian pre- sents (via an "adapted and con- densed English version") some wide-ranging commentaries on the historical role and the so- cial world of the eunuch in Chi- na. In early China, castration was practiced on captives as a sign of conquest; it was also meted out as punishment to members of Chinese society (the P great historian Ssu-ma Ch'ien so suffered), but in later times, the vast majority of eunuchs were volunteers. Entry into the palace household as a eunuch servant opened the door to wealth and power otherwise de- nied to a son of a poor family, +w or the ambitious but uneducated youth. The extraordinary political power which palace eunuchs sometimes acquired and then abused, thereby contributing through cliques and intrigues to the collapse of some Chinese dynasties is generally well- known to historians. Professor Mitamura not only touches on this political aspect of eunuch life, but also expands upon the more personal and intimate re- lationships (non-sexual) which often existed between members of the Imperial family and their eunuch servants and mentors. In addition, the author presents a brief picture of the more spe- cific duties and responsibilities of the eunuchs who administer- ed the various imperial house- hold agencies. The author makes several points of historical-sociological interest. One of these points concerns the changes in atti- tudes toward sexual and domes- tic life in general which occur- red after the tenth century in China; a second interesting point is the contention that pri- or to the T'ang dynasty (618- 906) eunuchs were provided by conquered non-Chinese tribes and races, whereas, during and after the T'ang era, the demand was supplied largely by the Chi- nese themselves, particularly those living in South China. The subject of eunuchs in China, with all its attendant historical, social, physiological and psychological ramifications is exceedingly vast and complex, the records and source mater- ials exasperatingly meagre and Toddy's Writers. . Jenny Stiller was Editorial Page Editor of The Daily, 1969- 70. A graduate student in the Department of Art History, Anya Gendler specializes in the arts of Japan. E. J. 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