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Contemporary Hand-Painted Japanese Screen of Standing Cranes

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  • Japanese Two-Panel Screen: Cranes on Gold
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    Antique Late 18th Century Japanese Paintings and Screens

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  • 17th Century Japanese Screen Pair, Cranes
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    Cranes Anonymous, Kano School. Edo period, second half of the 17th century. Pair of six-panel screens. Ink, pigment gofun and gold l...
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  • Japanese Two Panel Screen Amorous Cranes and Turtles
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Japanese two panel screen: Amorous Cranes and Turtles. In Japan, cranes symbolize fidelity as they mate for life and turtles symbolize longevity. Additionally, this screen also has the Japanese motif of sho-chiku-bai, or the three friends of winter (pine, plum, and bamboo). So called the three friends of winter because all three flourish during the cold months. This screen was originally fusuma doors...
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    Antique 1850s Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

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  • Japanese Two Panel Screen Manchurian Crane and Turtles
    Located in Hudson, NY
    In Japan, cranes symbolize fidelity as they mate for life and turtles symbolize longevity. Additionally, this screen also has the Japanese motif of sho-chiku-bai, or the three friends of winter (pine, plum, and bamboo). So called the three friends of winter because all three flourish during the cold months. This screen was originally fusuma doors...
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    Antique Mid-19th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

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  • Japanese Showa Six Panel Screen Manchurian Crane Bamboo Grove
    Located in Rio Vista, CA
    Enchanting Japanese Showa period six-panel byobu screen titled "Bamboo Forest-Immortal Together". The large screen depicts six manchurian cranes in a ...
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  • Circa 1700 Japanese Screen Pair, Cranes & Pines, Kyoto Kano School
    Located in Kyoto, JP
    Pines and Cranes Anonymous. Kyoto Kano School. Late 17th/early 18th centuries, circa 1700. Pair of six-panel Japanese folding screens. Ink, gofun, pigment and gold leaf on paper. This bold composition presents two pine trees extending to the left and right across a gold leaf background. One tree is silhouetted against a green ground, golden clouds obscuring its true size, the other stretches across a stylized waterway. The pines are paired with Manchurian cranes with red crests and snow white plumage. Both have been highly auspicious motifs in East Asia since Chinese antiquity. Here the artist utilized fluid and instinctive ink brushstrokes to define the trunk, branches and tail feathers, in strong contrast to the precision and sharp angularity of the crane’s legs and beaks. The adoption of this vast metallic painting support required an unerring sense of design and composition, so that the negative space surrounding motifs could imply context for the otherwise floating pictorial elements. The brushwork detailing the trunks of the pines, the exaggerated dimensions of the pine trees and the strength and dynamism of the composition are all reminiscent of Kano Eitoku...
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    Antique Late 17th Century Japanese Edo Paintings and Screens

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