Mount Fuji Landscape
Artist
Kano Tsunenobu
(Japanese, 1636–1713)
Dateunknown
MediumHanging scroll: ink and slight colors on silk
DimensionsImage: 13 1/8 x 29 5/8 inches (33.3 x 75.2 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineGeorge and Mary Rockwell Collection
Terms
- Paintings
- ink and slight colors
- Mount Fuji, Honshu, Japan
- Mountains
- Hanging scroll
- Silk
- Japanese
- Japanese
Object number88.002.196
Label CopyThe Kano lineage of painters was among Japan’s most long-lived schools, remaining a conservative force in Japanese painting for some four hundred years. Their monochrome ink landscapes, ultimately modeled on the misty, idealized Chinese Southern Song painting tradition, remained popular among aristocratic and temple patrons for large-scale screens, as well as more intimate scrolls, made for private quarters.
Kano Tsunenobu, nephew of the pivotal early Edo-period master Kano Tanyu (1602-1674), followed the traditional formula in his compositional approach by confining the dense landscape elements into one corner of the painting, and counterbalancing this with seemingly unending watery and misty expanses. Admired for his deft brushwork, Tsunenobu employed the wet, ink outlines, axe-cut textural strokes, and delicate washes that characterize the lyrical Kano style.
Collections
Kano Tsunenobu
Unidentified artist
Kano Tsunenobu
Unidentified artist