EXHIBITIONS:
- Mystic Peak: Selections from the Jane and Raphael Bernstein Collection of Japanese Art, 2021-22
- The Tale of Genji: A Japanese Classic Illuminated, 2019
Mystic Peak: Selections from the Jane and Raphael Bernstein Collection of Japanese Art, 2021-22

Guest curated by Melissa McCormick for the Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College. August 2021-February 6, 2022.
The show’s title comes from a work of calligraphy (below), a Zen kōan from the Blue Cliff Record (1125) in which a monk asks “What is the lone summit of mystic peak 妙峰頂?” The Daitokuji monk Seigan Sōi (1588-1661) who brushed the calligraphy answered the question with two brushstrokes that represent the wall-gazing Bodhidharma. The Bodhidharma, a word-picture (moji-e) made up of the character for “mind,” lies somewhere between text and image, neither and both; a perfect counterpart to the kōan.
Other highlights from the show include a rare portrait of the founder of the tea ceremony in Japan, Sen no Rikyū (1522-1591) by Tosa Mitsuoki (1617-1691), two ink paintings by Soga Shōhaku (1730-81), an important Genji screen by Kano Takanobu (1571-1618), and a medieval Big Dipper Star Mandala, with combinatory deities.
This show is part of a multi-faceted series of exhibitions of the Jane and Raphael Bernstein collection at the Hood, “A Legacy for Learning,” with an accompanying catalogue, encompassing 18th c. Hogarth prints, 20th-century American landscape and portrait photography, contemporary Inuit art from the Canadian Arctic, traditional Japanese art, and a collection of prints and paintings by Shinoda Tōkō (1913-2021). The exhibitions commemorate a major gift to the museum by the Bernsteins and their thirty-plus years of institutional support.
VIRTUAL TOURS:
Take a virtual tour of Mystic Peak here
Take a virtual tour of an earlier installation during the museum’s closure of works by Toko Shinoda here curated by Jessica Hong, Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Toledo Museum of Art.

Photo credit: Installation photo by John Strong.
The Tale of Genji: A Japanese Classic Illuminated, 2019
The Tale of Genji: A Japanese Classic Illuminated The Metropolitan Museum of Art, March 5–June 16, 2019

The first major loan exhibition in North America to focus on the artistic tradition inspired by Japan’s most celebrated work of literature, The Tale of Genji. Written by Murasaki Shikibu, a lady-in-waiting in the early eleventh-century imperial court, and often referred to as the world’s first psychological novel, the tale recounts the life of the “shining prince” Genji and introduces some of the most iconic female characters in the history of Japanese literature. Covering the period from the eleventh century to the present, the exhibition features more than 120 works, including paintings, calligraphy, silk robes, lacquer wedding set items, a palanquin for the shogun’s bride, and popular art such as ukiyo-e prints and modern manga. Highlights include two National Treasures and several works recognized as Important Cultural Properties never before exhibited outside Japan. Among these are rare works from Ishiyamadera Temple—where, according to legend, Shikibu started writing the tale. Together they help illuminate Genji’s female authorship and overlooked Buddhist aspects of the tale’s reception.