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"Art is the Mother of Religion," said Onisaburo,
and accordingly Oomoto has fostered the study and
practice of many traditional Japanese arts at its
grounds in Kameoka and Ayabe. The emphasis on the
arts is so strong as to be one of the predominant
features of Oomoto. Most of the religious exchanges
sponsored by Oomoto also involve performances or
practice of traditional arts.
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Oomoto Art Exhibition, 1972-1975
From 1972 through 1975, Oomoto sponsored
an exhibition of art by its Founders, which
traveled for three years and three months,
to 13 cities in Europe and the USA, including
Paris, New York, and San Francisco. The
exhibition was the precursor for later
activities such as the joint worship services
with the Episcopal Church, and the Oomoto
School of Traditional Japanese Arts.
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Students at the Oomoto School of Traditional Japanese Arts
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Oomoto School of Traditional Japanese Arts, 1976-1996
At the urging of David Kidd, an art collector living in
Kyoto and friend of Naohi, Oomoto established a one month
seminar in 1976 which taught traditional arts to foreigners
(as well as a few Japanese). Over the twenty years of the
life of the Seminar, hundreds of students came from over
twenty countries, including the USA, Europe, Southeast
Asia, and the Middle East, and ranging in age from 14 to 70.
The Seminar has been the only place in Japan where students
could simultaneously study Noh drama, tea ceremony, calligraphy,
martial arts, as well as pottery, ink painting, and flower
arranging. The intent of the seminar was for students to take
the spiritual principles they learned at the Oomoto School
and to apply them to arts and religious practices in their
home countries.
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