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19th Century Japanese Landscape Folding Screen Rice Paper and Gold Specks

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  • Japanese Folding Screen Six Panels Painted on Gold Leaf
    By Japanese Studio
    Located in Brescia, IT
    Paravento a sei pannelli di scuola giapponese Kano: paesaggio con bellissime ed eleganti gru vicino al fiume, con alberi di pino e sakura. Dipinto a mano con pigmenti minerali ed inc...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Edo Landscape Japanese Folding Screen
    By Japanese Studio
    Located in Brescia, IT
    Refined work by a painter from the first half of the 19th century, from the landscape of the "Rinpa" school by a painter from the end of the 18th century, the Rinpa school. Six panels painted in ink on gold leaf and "gofun" on vegetable paper. The flowers are made with the "gofun" technique, natural or pigmented white oyster powder. Rinpa is one of the major historical schools of Japanese painting. The style was consolidated by the brothers Ogata Korin (1658–1716) and Ogata Kenzan (1663–1743). This folding screen has a very clean design that leaves plenty of room for the beautiful golden landscape. It comes flat and you can easily hang it with our hooks. Lucio Morini...
    Category

    Antique 18th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Six-Panel Japanese Screen on Spring Gold Leaf
    Located in Brescia, IT
    Spring landscape by an unknown painter of the Rinpa school, 19th century, six-panel ink painted on gold leaf on rice paper. The flowers are made with the "gofun" technique, natural or pigmented white oyster powder. Rinpa (? ?, Rinpa) is one of the major historical schools of Japanese painting. the style was consolidated by the brothers Ogata Korin (1658–1716) and Ogata Kenzan...
    Category

    Antique Late 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • 20th Century Showa Period Beautiful Spring Garden Folding Screen Two Panels
    Located in Brescia, IT
    Japanese screen with two doors painted with mineral pigments on rice paper. Early Showa period.
    Category

    Late 20th Century Japanese Showa Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Paper

  • Japanese Screen of Spring on Gold Leaf
    Located in Brescia, IT
    It is a two-panel screen from the Taisho period, around 1920, beautifully painted in excellent detail. The best of Rinpa's school painting: large empty space that highlights a pair of mandarin ducks in the middle of the pond. On the right, flying birds give the painting a great lightness, under many multicolored flowers they celebrate spring. All very proportionate and pleasant, the dimension really interesting. Mineral pigments on gold leaf. It turns out Anonymous. Lucio Morini.
    Category

    Early 20th Century Japanese Taisho Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Six-Panel Japanese Screen
    By Japanese Studio
    Located in Brescia, IT
    Six-panel screen of Rinpa school, painted with mineral pigments and gofun on vegetable paper and silver leaf.
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Silver Leaf

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  • 19th Century Japanese Edo Six Panel Kano School Landscape Screen
    Located in Rio Vista, CA
    Late Edo period 19th century Japanese six-panel landscape screen featuring a cypress tree over a flowering hibiscus with a pair of hototogisu birds. Kano school painted with ink and ...
    Category

    Antique 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Silk, Wood, Paper

  • Japanese Screen, 19th Century, Rabbits and Horsetail Reeds on Silver Leaf
    By Nenma
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    Unknown artist Rabbits and Horsetail Reeds Painted in the Year of the Fire Dog, 1826 or 1886. 19th century. The scene depicted here is set under moonlight, with two hares hi...
    Category

    Antique Mid-19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Silver Leaf

  • 19th Century Japanese Screen for Tea-Ceremony, Ink Bamboo and Plum on Gold Leaf
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    Three Friends of Winter Nakajima Raisho (1796-1871) Late Edo period, circa 1850 Ink and gold leaf on paper. This is a double-sided Japanese Furosaki or tea-ceremony screen from the mid 19th century; bamboo and plum on the front, young pines the back. It by Nakajima Raisho, a master painter of the Maruyama school in the late Edo and early Meiji periods. In this work Raisho combines exquisite ink brushwork with large open spaces of brilliant gold-leaf to inspire the viewers imagination. Rather than naturalism, he is searching for the phycological impression of the motifs, resulting in abstraction and stylization. His simplification of the motifs the result of looking to capture the inner nature of the objects. This art motif is known as Sho Chiku Bai, or the Three Friends of Winter. Evergreen pine connotes steadfastness, bamboo suggests both strength and flexibility, while plum blossoms unfurling on snow-laden branches imply hardiness. Combined, this trio is emblematic of Japanese new year. Chinese literati were the first to group the three plants together due to their noble characteristics. Like these resilient plants flowering so beautifully in winter, it was expected of the scholar-gentleman to cultivate a strong character with which he would be able to show the same degree of perseverance and steadfastness even during times of adverse conditions. The screen would have been placed near the hearth of a room used for the Japanese tea ceremony, shielding the fire from draughts and also forming a stimulating and decorative backdrop behind the tea utensils. It would have been used in the Hatsugama, or first tea-ceremony of the new year. Nakajima Raisho (1796-1871) originally studied under Watanabe Nangaku before entering the school of Maruyama Ozui. He was the highest ranking Maruyama school painter at the end of the Edo period and was known as one of the ‘Four Heian Families’ along with Kishi...
    Category

    Antique Mid-19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Japanese Screen Painting, Early 19th Century, Autumn Flowers by Sakai Hoitsu
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    A two-fold Japanese screen by the Rimpa school artist Sakai Hoitsu (1761-1828), Japan, 19th century, Edo period. This small Japanese folding screen pai...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Wood, Silk

  • Early 19th Century Japanese Screen. Cherry Blossom & Pheasants by Mori Tetsuzan
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    Mori Tetsuzan (1775-1841) Pheasants and Cherry Blossoms Two-fold Japanese screen. Ink, color, gofun, gold and silver on paper. A two-fold Japanese bir...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Japanese Six Panel Screen with Hotei, Edo Period, Early 19th Century
    Located in Austin, TX
    A delightful Japanese six panel painted paper screen featuring the beloved figure Hotei, Edo Period, early 19th century. Hotei, called Budai in China, and known as the Laughing Buddha or Fat Buddha in the West, is considered to be an emanation of Maitreya, the Buddha of the Future. In Japan, he also holds a special place as one of the Seven Lucky Gods, being the god of fortune, and protector of children. He is always portrayed as a mirthful and corpulent man, dressed in loose robes that show off his round belly. He carries a sack with him, said to be filled with treasure. As the protector of children, he is often portrayed with them playing on or around him, as he is here. The children portrayed in this screen are dressed in Chinese style clothing...
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

    Materials

    Silk, Paper

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