English
Rough Waves
Many artists and poets of the East and West alike have striven to capture the transitory and fleeting image of swelling waves. Kōrin’s rendition—one of Japan’s most striking representations of this amorphous, ungraspable form—has a strangely menacing feel, due no doubt to the long, tentacle-like fingers of foam, punctured here and there by openings. Outlined in ink using the ancient Chinese technique of drawing with two brushes held together in one hand, the clawlike waves are peculiarly reminiscent of dragons’ talons. The immediate inspiration for the screen may have been images by Sesson Shūkei (ca. 1504–ca. 1589), whose extant works include a number of dynamic and mysterious renderings of waves.
The screen bears a seal reading “Dōsū,” the name Kōrin adopted in 1704. Recent research suggests that the screen was executed between 1704 and 1709, when Kōrin was residing in Edo (now Tokyo).
The screen bears a seal reading “Dōsū,” the name Kōrin adopted in 1704. Recent research suggests that the screen was executed between 1704 and 1709, when Kōrin was residing in Edo (now Tokyo).
Artwork Details
- 波濤図屏風
- Title: Rough Waves
- Artist: Ogata Kōrin (Japanese, 1658–1716)
- Period: Edo period (1615–1868)
- Date: ca. 1704–9
- Culture: Japan
- Medium: Two-panel folding screen; ink, color, and gold leaf on paper
- Dimensions: Image: 57 11/16 × 65 1/8 in. (146.5 × 165.4 cm)
Overall: 59 1/4 × 66 1/2 in. (150.5 × 168.9 cm) - Classification: Paintings
- Credit Line: Fletcher Fund, 1926
- Object Number: 26.117
- Curatorial Department: Asian Art
Audio
7702. Rough Waves
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