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Flowers and Trees of the Twelve Months

Nakamura Hōchū Japanese

Not on view

On this pair of screens, fan-shaped compositions, each painted with a motif emblematic of one of the twelve months of the year, are scattered across a ground of two-toned golden mists. Gold accents and mottled ink (tarashikomi) bring to life stylized wisteria vines curling in the late spring sun; maple leaves falling into the swift current of a river in autumn; and touches of white shell pigment that cloak a wintry scene of black pine. The artist reached a high degree of abstraction in his depiction of summer corn, which appears at the center of the right-hand panel of the left-hand screen. He signed each of the paintings, and sealed six with a round seal, six with a square one. Like these screens, many of his paintings demonstrate the influence of Ogata Kōrin. However, the Osaka-based Hōchū also moved in Confucian literary circles, and took interest in Chinese-style literati painting (Nanga).

Flowers and Trees of the Twelve Months, Nakamura Hōchū (Japanese, died 1819), Twelve fans on a pair of two-panel folding screens; ink, color, and gold on paper, Japan

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