"view into room of kyakuden(guest hall)"
shows tokonoma flanked by fusuma panels
Kangakuin Precinct, Onjoji, Shiga Prefecture
by Kano Mitsunobu, c. 1600
(Azuchi-Momoyama Period)
- artist is son of Kano Eitoku--took over main branch of Kano school after father's death in 1590
- very different artistic temperament from father
- after death revealed that he was not as artistically ambitious
- turned away from father's dramatic, monumental style
- preferred in flatter, more detailed, elegant manner
- liked yamato-e themes (birds, flowers, seasons)
- this kyakuden features one of Mitsunobu's most successful paintings
- serioes of designs for tokonoma and fusuma panels
- commissioned for main room of kyakuden by Hideyoshi's son Hideyori
- kyakuden located in Kangakuin enclosure of Onjoji
- Mitsonobu stressed differences between various parts of the room (versus fada, who would try to unify room by illusion of walls dissolving into space, coming together as single architectural entity)
- reasserted flatness and unitary quality of individual fusuma panels
- features flowers and trees of the four seasons
- east: plum blossoms and camelias
- south: grove of cedar and flowering cherry trees
- west: flowers of summer and fall changing leaves
- north: climax fusuma waterfall between evergreens with snow-rimmed shore
- broad areas of flat gold leaf=ground or clouds, contain floral motifs w/in shallow space
- sequence unfolds right to left, unusual direction
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