Landscape with Buildings
Artist/Makerattributed to
Oguri Sōtan 小栗宗湛
(Japanese, 1413–1481)
Date15th–16th century
MediumHanging scroll, ink on paper
DimensionsOverall: 32 13/16 × 13 11/16 in. (83.3 × 34.8 cm)
Mount: 68 3/8 × 19 3/8 in. (173.7 × 49.2 cm)
Mount: 68 3/8 × 19 3/8 in. (173.7 × 49.2 cm)
Credit LineMrs. F. F. Prentiss Fund
Object number1956.41
Status
Not on viewThe tradition of ink monochrome landscape painting was brought from China to Japan by merchants and Buddhist monks in the thirteenth or fourteenth centuries. It was initially practiced by monk-painters active in the major Zen temples, but was also appreciated by the secular military elites who ruled Japan at that time. This Japanese scroll closely follows Chinese models. It depicts a mountainous landscape that is sharply defined in the foreground and becomes less distinct in the distance. Evidence of human civilization is visible but is dwarfed by the majestic natural forms. The composition is heavily weighted to one side, and large expanses of empty space give the image an evocative, lyrical quality. Indeed, the scroll belongs to a larger tradition of Chinese and Japanese paintings that were considered to be "poems without sound" and were intended to stimulate the viewer's imagination more than to portray a physical place.
An old seal in one corner of the painting attributes it to a famous monk-painter named Oguri S otan (1413-1481). Genuine Sotan paintings are rare, however, and it is doubtful that this scroll is actually from his hand. But it is most likely from the same period, and may have been the model for a similar painting ascribed to the monk Gakuo (active ca. 1504-1520) that is now in the Tokyo National Museum. Oberlin purchased this scroll from Cleveland-based dealer Howard Hollis in 1956 on the advice of Sherman Lee, a distinguished scholar who was then Curator of Oriental Art at the Cleveland Museum of Art and later became its director. Lee advised the AMAM on a number of Asian art purchases in the 1950s and '60s that greatly expanded and improved that part of the museum's collection.
Exhibition History
An old seal in one corner of the painting attributes it to a famous monk-painter named Oguri S otan (1413-1481). Genuine Sotan paintings are rare, however, and it is doubtful that this scroll is actually from his hand. But it is most likely from the same period, and may have been the model for a similar painting ascribed to the monk Gakuo (active ca. 1504-1520) that is now in the Tokyo National Museum. Oberlin purchased this scroll from Cleveland-based dealer Howard Hollis in 1956 on the advice of Sherman Lee, a distinguished scholar who was then Curator of Oriental Art at the Cleveland Museum of Art and later became its director. Lee advised the AMAM on a number of Asian art purchases in the 1950s and '60s that greatly expanded and improved that part of the museum's collection.
Japanese Art in America
- Scripps College Art Gallery, Claremont, CA (April 19, 1960 - May 15, 1960 )
Tea Taste in Japanese Art
- Asia House Gallery, Asia Society, Inc., New York (February 24, 1963 - April 21, 1963 )
Masters of Landscape: East and West
- Munson Williams Proctor Institute, Utica, NY (September 15, 1963 - October 13, 1963 )
- Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester, NY (November 1, 1963 - December 1, 1963 )
Highlights of the Ainsworth Collection of Japanese Woodblock Prints
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (May 15, 1990 - July 18, 1990 )
Chinese and Japanese Art from Antiquity to the Present
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 17, 2002 - June 9, 2003 )
The Cultured Landscape in China and Japan
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 6, 2007 - August 13, 2007 )
Collections
- Asian
This record was created from historic documentation and may not have been reviewed by a curator. Noticed a mistake? Have some extra information about this object?
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late 19th century
late 19th century
late 19th–early 20th century
late 19th century