2015年4月12日 星期日

Suzuki Kiitsu (Japanese, 1796–1858)

“Discovering Japanese Art: American Collectors and the Met” showcases more than two hundred masterworks of every medium. This exhibition tells the story of how the Museum built its comprehensive collection of Japanese art. http://met.org/1D3D5qL

"Morning Glories" (asagao). One of a pair of folding screens paintings by Kiitsu. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Acc. no. 54.69.1,2.

Suzuki Kiitsu (Japanese, 1796–1858) | Morning Glories 朝顏/牽牛花 | early 19th century
Suzuki Kiitsu was a prominent late Edo periodpainter in the Rinpa style, a student and stylistic successor of Sakai Hôitsu.
Kiitsu was originally trained as a dyer of textiles, but later came to study painting under Sakai Hôitsu, and collaborated with Hôitsu on a number of projects. These included the Kôrin hyakuzu ("One Hundred Pictures by Kôrin"), a woodblock-printed book collecting line-drawing reproductions of compositions by Ogata Kôrin (d. 1716), a painter of a few generations prior, after whom the Rinpa style took its name.

References

  • "Morning Glories," Gallery label. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Accession Number 54.69.1,2.

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