Artwork Page for Arrival of the "Southern Barbarians"

Details / Information for Arrival of the "Southern Barbarians"

Arrival of the "Southern Barbarians"

南蛮図屏風

c. 1600
Measurements
Image: 146.7 x 337.2 cm (57 3/4 x 132 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Europeans were called "Southern Barbarians" because their ships arrived in Japan from the south.

Description

This screen and its corresponding screen show Portuguese merchants arriving in Japan, having crossed the oceans in their large ship with a multinational crew. The Portuguese were known in Japan as the “Southern Barbarians” because they arrived from the south and their customs and manners were unfamiliar to the Japanese, who had not encountered anyone from Europe until their first appearance in 1543. In 1639, the Portuguese were forced out of Japan, mainly owing to internal difficulties caused by their Catholic missionaries, but they were a major conduit for both objects and ideas from Europe for nearly 100 years.
A horizontally oriented ink and color six-panel folding screen depicts a coastal town teeming with figures. Stylized gold-leaf clouds drift across scenes of people with light skin tones walking between open-air buildings. At bottom left, men navigate a dark boat through cresting blue waves. Architectural details reveal interiors where groups gather. A multicolored, zigzag-patterned border frames the intricate composition, which contrasts vibrant figures against a shimmering gold ground.

Arrival of the "Southern Barbarians"

c. 1600

Japan, Momoyama period (1573–1615)

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