Early Edo period, mid 17th century
This painting depicts two seasonal flowers in an abstract and yet naturalistic composition; upright floral silhouettes rise gracefully from shadowy or imperceptible roots in a strikingly decorative design devoid of any visible ground plane. Individual plant forms are defined using a technique known as tarashikomi, in which black ink and/or mineral pigments have been splashed onto areas of still-moist ink wash, resulting in evocative pools of saturation. The evolution of such seemingly effortless and yet technically difficult decorative imagery also found expression in many other media during the Edo period (1615-1868), so that divisions between the various arts--such as painting, lacquerware, and metalwork--began to blur. Tarashikomi is one of the hallmarks of so-called Rimpa-style paintings--works done in emulation of Tawaraya Sōtatsu (died c. 1643), who is credited with having consciously evoked and updated the rich, allusive imagery of Japan's Heian-period (794-1185) past. The artist to whom this painting is attributed, Kitagawa Sōsetsu, appears to have been an accomplished and faithful mid-seventeenth-century follower in the direct line of Sōtatsu; however, many questions remain regarding Sōsetsu's identity and oeuvre. This work is likely one of a set of paintings depicting either the Flowers of the Twelve Months or the Flowers of the Four Seasons.
painting proper: H. 104.5 x W. 40.3 cm (41 1/8 x 15 7/8 in.) mounting, including cord and roller ends: H. 188 x W. 55.2 cm (74 x 21 3/4 in.)
Hanging scroll; ink and light color on paper
18th-19th centuryJapaneseAlbum; ink on paper
18th centuryJapaneseSix-panel folding screen (left of a pair); ink on paper
18th-19th centuryJapaneseFolded book (fifth of six); ink, color, gold and silver on paper
17th-18th centuryJapaneseHandscroll: fourth of five; ink, color, gold and silver on paper
18th-19th centuryJapaneseAlbum; ink on paper
18th centuryJapaneseTwo-panel folding screen; ink, color and gold on silk
18th-19th centuryJapaneseHanging scroll; ink and light color on silk.
18th centuryJapaneseTwo-panel folding screen; ink, color, gold and silver on paper
18th-19th centuryJapaneseAlbum leaf or handscroll section(?) mounted as a hanging scroll; ink and light colors on paper; with artist's seal reading Sangaku Dōja
18th centuryJapaneseAlbum; ink on paper
18th centuryJapaneseHandscroll; ink and color on paper; calligraphy on paper with silver and gold
17th-18th centuryJapanese