Offered by: Thomsen Gallery
9 East 63rd Street New York City, NY 10065 , United States Call Seller 212.288.2588

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Snow on Awaji Island, with Poem, mid-19th century

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  • Description
    Ōtagaki Rengetsu
    Snow on Awaji Island, with Poem, mid-19th century
    Hanging scroll; ink on paper, in silk mounts
    Overall size 79¾ x 14¾ in. (203 x 38 cm)
    Image size 45¾ x 10¼ in. (116.5 x 326.5 cm)
    T-4346

    With wood kiwamebako (certificated storage box) inscribed Rengetsu Rōni jiga Awauta ichi 蓮月老尼自画淡和歌 一 (Awaji painting and poem by the venerable nun Rengetsu, one), the reverse of the lid signed and dated Shōwa 47nen shoshun kore o mitomeru Jinkōin Rōnō Teien 昭和四十七年初春認之 神光院老衲定圓 (Certified in January 1972 by Teien, an elderly priest of the Jinkōin) with a seal Teien 定圓; with a transcription of the opening lines of the poem: うた 立ちかへり なにわすかかさ 云々(see below); label of the prestigious Kyoto scroll-mounting studio Seikōdō 清光堂

    Above a deftly abbreviated landscape depicting sailboats in front of Awaji Island in snow, Ōtagaki Rengetsu has brushed a thirty-one-syllable waka poem in her distinctive threadlike hand: Tachikaeri / Naniwa sugagasa / kite mo min / yuki omoshiroki / Awajishimayama 立かへりなにはすかかさきてもみん雪おもろしきあはちしま山 (On my return I / shall wear a rustic hat straw hat / made in Naniwa / so that I can better see / Mount Awaji’s slopes in snow).
    The poem appears as number 207 in the Winter section of Ama no karumo (A Seaweed Diver’s Harvest), an anthology of Rengetsu’s poems compiled during her lifetime in 1871, see www.rengetsu.com/poetry/primer/.

    Adopted shortly after her birth by an official of Chion-in, the Kyoto headquarters temple of the Jōdo (Pure Land) sect of Buddhism, at age eight Nobu (her childhood name) was sent to serve as an attendant at Kameoka Castle, where over a period of nine years she received a thorough samurai education, especially in the martial arts and ninjutsu. Famed both for her ninja skills and as a great beauty, she returned home to marry at age 17 but her later life was marred by tragedy. After losing two husbands, five children, and her stepmother, at age 33 she took vows as a Buddhist nun, assumed the monastic name, Rengetsu, "Lotus Moon," and lived with her father in a sub-temple for ten years until he too died. Aged 43, Rengetsu was now alone. In order to make a living she began producing simple hand-built pots, each incised with one of her poems.

    Her rustic ceramics, known as Rengetsu-yaki, were in such demand that it was said that nearly every household in Kyoto had a piece and they were widely imitated. Rengetsu’s poetry, calligraphy, and paintings—mostly dating from her later years—were also admired during her lifetime, as were her frugal lifestyle, peacemaking skills, and charitable donations for famine relief and reconstruction of the city after natural disasters. She remained active to the very end, completing her last painting two days before her death at age 85
  • More Information
    Documentation: Signed
    Period: 19th Century
    Creation Date: Mid 19th Century
    Styles / Movements: Asian Art
    Incollect Reference #: 670408
  • Dimensions
    W. 14.75 in; H. 79.75 in;
    W. 37.47 cm; H. 202.57 cm;
Message from Seller:

Thomsen gallery, located in a townhouse on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, offers important Japanese paintings and works of art to collectors and museums worldwide. The gallery specializes in Japanese screens and scrolls; in early Japanese tea ceramics from the medieval through the Edo periods; in masterpieces of ikebana bamboo baskets; and in gold lacquer objects.

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