Unkoku Toteki
Japanese, 1606–1664
Mountain landscape
Hanging scroll: ink and light colors on silk
27 1/4 x 13 7/8 inches (71 x 35 cm)
Gift of Martie and Alice Young
88.055
Unkoku Toteki
Japanese, 1606–1664
Mountain landscape
Hanging scroll: ink and light colors on silk
27 1/4 x 13 7/8 inches (71 x 35 cm)
Gift of Martie and Alice Young
88.055
Unkoku Toteki was a grandson of Unkoku Togan (1547–1618), who founded the Unkoku school under the patronage of the feudal lord Mori Terumoto in Suo Province (presently Yamaguchi Prefecture). The Unkoku school began with ink paintings during the Muromachi period (1392–1573) and claimed artistic descent from the great painter Sesshu (1520–1606).
Toteki, after the death of his father To’oku (1582?–1615), learned painting from his uncle Toeki...
Unkoku Toteki was a grandson of Unkoku Togan (1547–1618), who founded the Unkoku school under the patronage of the feudal lord Mori Terumoto in Suo Province (presently Yamaguchi Prefecture). The Unkoku school began with ink paintings during the Muromachi period (1392–1573) and claimed artistic descent from the great painter Sesshu (1520–1606).
Toteki, after the death of his father To’oku (1582?–1615), learned painting from his uncle Toeki (1591–1644). This painting depicts an idealized Chinese landscape and continues the typical Muromachi compositions that used the vertical hanging scroll format made popular during the Song and Yuan dynasties in China. Here a Chinese scholar with his servant crosses a bridge at the left, and another scholar rides a mule while traveling along a path leading up to the temple in the towering mountains. The distant mountains and villages beyond the river in the background are dramatically contrasted with the tall pine firmly rooted to the rock at the center of the foreground.



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