Plum Drawn from the Mind, first half 19th century, Baichi D?jin, Japanese, 1785 - 1859, 53 3/16 ¡Ñ 26 1/16 in. (135.1 ¡Ñ 66.2 cm) (image)83 3/8 ¡Ñ 27 1/2 in. (211.77 ¡Ñ 69.85 cm) (without roller), Hanging scroll; ink on paper, Japan, 19th century, The practice of painting blossoming plum branches in monochrome ink seems to have emerged in tenth-century China and became popular among the Japanese literati of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Delicate flowers budding from a wizened plum tree during the winter carry associations of longevity, renewal, and purity. The inscription, shai, meaning ¡¥drawn from the mind,¡¦ is the opposite of shasei, or ¡¥sketched from life;¡¦ indeed, this is a particularly free-spirited and imaginative interpretation of this subject. A variety of tones of ink applied in impressionistic splotches with a wet brush convey the vital splendor of a plum tree breaking into a profusion of blossoms at the cusp of spring.

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TOP29387323

Source:

達志影像

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RM

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須由TPG 完整授權

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