Ars Orientalis Issue 44

Ars Orientalis 44, “The Arts of Death in Asia,” is grew out of a panel of the same name held at the 2012 Association of Asian Studies Annual Conference in Toronto. Guest edited by Melia Belli, this volume unites diverse representations of death in art across Asia, while maintaining that Asia is far from a monolithic entity. Volume 44 aims to cultivate new insights about death and funerary art through an in-depth discussion of art objects in their appropriate contexts.

Articles in this volume move geographically east, from modern Uzbekistan to India to China and Japan. Included are discussions of death art found in Ottoman manuscripts and among Buddhist communities in northern Thailand.

Ars Orientalis 44 also marks the launch of the journal’s first entirely digital volume. It provides extras not available in the printed volume, including additional images, video content, and “Digital Initiatives,” a column that explores digital tools, research resources, publications, and learning opportunities in art history and related fields, with a special focus on topics relevant to Ars Orientalis readers. A complement to the printed volume, digital Ars Orientalis offers subscribers a new design and easily maneuverable features.

ARS ORIENTALIS 45

  • EDITOR–IN-CHIEF

    Nancy Micklewright

    ADVISORY BOARD

    Nachiket Chanchani
    Louise Cort
    Debra Diamond
    Marian Feldman
    Jennifer Robertson
    Avinoam Shalem

  • Senior EDITOR

    Jane Lusaka

    designer

    Edna Jamandre

    Managing editor

    Zeynep Simavi

  • EDITORIAL OFFICES

    Ars Orientalis
    Freer Gallery of Art
    Smithsonian Institution
    P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707
    Washington, D.C. 20013-7012

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    Washington, D.C. 20560

Issn 0571-1371
Printed in the United States of America
© 2014 Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C