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The Immortal Jurojin (Important Art Object)

Sesshu15th century - 16th century

Fukuoka Art Museum

Fukuoka Art Museum
Fukuoka, Japan

Sesshu was a Zen priest of the late Muromachi period (1333-1573), who went to Ming-dynasty (1368-1644) China in the first year of the Onin era (1467) to study painting. His powerful, tense brush style and highly constructed composition is a masterpiece of early Japanese ink painting, which later greatly influenced the various schools of Chinese-style ink painting (J., kanga) in Japan. The background of the immortal Jurojin and his white deer is executed in a light ink wash, while his nimbus is delineated by the uncolored white paper. The deer's body and the immortal's robe, in harmony with the luminous nimbus, become one forming concentric circles. This hanging scroll was originally part of a triptych that belonged to the Kuroda clan, lords of Chikuzen Province (present-day Fukuoka Prefecture). The two accompanying paintings of landscapes are today in the collection of the University of Michigan. In addition to these works, the Kuroda clan had also owned Landscape of the Four Seasons, which is attributed to Sesshu and designated an Important Cultural Property, suggesting that Sesshu, who is thought to have gone to and from China via Fukuoka, may have produced these works in this area.

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  • Title: The Immortal Jurojin (Important Art Object)
  • Creator: Sesshu
  • Date: 15th century - 16th century
  • Physical Dimensions: w43.6 x h107.7 cm
  • Materials and Techniques (Japanese): 紙本墨画
  • Type: Painting
  • Medium: Ink on paper
Fukuoka Art Museum

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