Irises (??????????, shihonkinji chakushoku kakitsubata-zu) is a pair of six-panel folding screens (by?bu) by the Japanese artist Ogata K?rin of the Rinpa school. It depicts an abstracted view of water with drifts of Japanese irises (Iris laevigata). The work was probably made circa 1701-05, in the period of luxurious display in the Edo period known as Genroku bunka.
The screens were held for over 200 years by the Nishi Honganji Buddhist temple in Kyoto. They are now held by the Nezu Museum, and they are a National Treasure of Japan.
A similar pair of screens make by Ogata K?rin about 5 to 12 years later depicting irises is held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. All four Irises screens were displayed together for the first time in almost a century in 2012 at the "Korin: National Treasure Irises of the Nezu Museum and Eight-Bridge of The Metropolitan Museum of Art" exhibition at the Nezu Museum.
Both screens are inspired by an episode in The Tales of Ise (????, Ise monogatari). In turn, copies of the screens are believed to have influenced the Impressionist paintings of Vincent van Gogh, including his Irises.
Video Irises screen
Irises
The screens are among the first works of Ogata K?rin (????) after he attained the rank of Hokky? (??) (meaning "Bridge of the Dharma"), the third highest rank awarded to Buddhist artists . It depicts bunches of abstracted blue Japanese irises in bloom, and their green foliage, creating a rhythmically repeating but varying pattern across the panels. The similarities of some blooms indicate that a stencil was used. The work shows influence of Tawaraya S?tatsu. It is typical of a new artistic school, Rin-pa (??), which takes its name from the last syllable of "K?rin".
K?rin adopts a very restrained palette, limited to the ultramarine blue of the flowers, the green of their foliage, and the gold background. The work was made with ink and colour, on paper, with squares of gold leaf applied around the painted areas to create a shimmering reflective background reminiscent of water. The deep blue was made from powdered azurite (?? (gunjo)).
Each six-panel screen measures 150.9 by 338.8 centimetres (59.4 in × 133.4 in). They screens were probably made for the Nij? family, and were presented to the Nishi Honganji Buddhist temple in Kyoto. They were sold by the temple in 1913.
Maps Irises screen
Irises at Yatsuhashi
K?rin made a similar work about 5 to 12 years later, another pair of six-panel screens, known as Irises at Yatsuhashi (Eight Bridges) (?????). This second pair of screens has been held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City since 1953, and were last displayed in 2013.
The second pair of iris screens, circa 1710-16, was also made using ink and color on gold-foiled paper, and measure 163.7 by 352.4 centimetres (64.4 in × 138.7 in in) each.
Unlike the earlier pair of iris screens, this later pair includes a depiction of an angular bridge, a more explicit reference to the literary work that inspires both works.
The Tales of Ise
Both pairs of screens are inspired by an episode in The Tales of Ise (????, Ise monogatari), where the unnamed protagonist of the story, probably the poet Ariwara no Narihira, encounters the flowers near a rustic eight-plank bridge over a river, and is inspired to compose a romantic poem, a form of acrostic where the first syllable of each line creates the Japanese work for iris (ka-ki-tsu-ha-(ba)-ta). The Japanese iris, Iris laevigata (Kakitsubata (?????)) grows in marshy wet land.
Influence
The screens clearly influenced the Irises paintings by Vincent van Gogh: he could never have seen the originals, which were still in Japan, but they were reproduced as woodcuts in a collection, Korin Hyakuzu Kohen.
See also
- Red and White Plum Blossoms
Notes
References
- Irises, Nezu Museum
- ???? (kakitsubata-zu), Nezu Museum
- ????? Irises at Yatsuhashi (Eight Bridges), Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Designing Nature: The Rinpa Aesthetic in Japanese Art, John T. Carpenter, Metropolitan Museum of Art p.210
- Irises: Vincent Van Gogh in the Garden, Jennifer Helvey, p.118
- Twenty-Five Words for Iris: Ogata Korin at the Nezu Museum, Alan Gleason, artscape Japan
- Irises (kakitsubata) by Ogata Korn, Columbia University
- Daugherty, Cynthia (March 2003). "Historiography and Iconography in Ogata Korin's Iris and Plum Screens". Ningen Kagaku Hen. Kyushu Institute of Technology (16): 39-91.
Source of the article : Wikipedia