The monk-painter Bokusai is well known in Japan as a disciple of Ikkyū Sōjun and an accomplished portrait artist. His sketch-portrait of Ikkyū in the Tokyo National Museum is one of the masterpieces of portraiture in the world. Here he has fashioned an amusing but enigmatic scene reminiscent of a village festival procession, complete with music, dancing, and a float. It is surely a Zen parable turned into a picture, but one as yet unrecognized by scholars or clarified in Bokusai’s lengthy inscription. The originality of the idea as well as its execution in the plainest, most subtle ink tones and direct brush manner serve to heighten the viewer’s delight in contemplating its possible meaning.
Date
1600s-1800s
Medium
Hanging scroll, ink on paper
Dimensions
Image: 30.7 x 45 cm (12 1/16 x 17 11/16 in.); Overall: 122.5 x 55.9 cm (48 1/4 x 22 in.)
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