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Style, Space and Meaning in the Large-Scale Landscape Paintings of Maruyama Ōkyo (1733-1795)
Author Bartel, Jens (著)
Date2019.01
Pages388
PublisherColumbia University
Publisher Url https://www.columbia.edu/
LocationNew York, NY, US [紐約, 紐約州, 美國]
Content type博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
Language英文=English
Degreedoctor
InstitutionColumbia University
DepartmentArt History and Archaeology
AdvisorMatthew Philip McKelway
Publication year2019
AbstractThis thesis centers on groups of landscape paintings on sliding doors and wall panels for temples in and around Kyoto by the painter Maruyama Ōkyo (1733-1795), dating to the latter half of the eighteenth century. I discuss Snow Landscape of the Chiba City Museum of Art, presumed to have been painted for the temple Enman’in in Ōtsu (Shiga Prefecture), and the former sliding door and wall paintings of Kiun’in, a subtemple of Nanzenji in Kyoto, now in the collection of the Tokyo National Museum. The analysis is embedded into considerations of underlying genre principles in Ōkyo’s art, the reflection on the relevance of “truthfulness to nature” (shasei) and considerations of how his works relate to established painting conventions in early modern Japan. I attempt to frame Ōkyo’s landscapes as an expression of the painter’s Chinese-inspired outlook on painting.
Chapter One centers on Snow Landscape. I use stylistic comparison to argue that the paintings do not match other ink landscapes by Ōkyo of the so-called Enman’in period, but resemble closely another set of sliding doors paintings of similar subject matter at Shōkokuji, dated 1790. Snow Landscape can be understood as part of a small group of Ōkyo works that are thematically and formally related, and that all share obscure provenance and previously unaddressed questions of authorship. This includes sliding door paintings of the temple Daijōji (Hyōgo Prefecture), of Nishi Honganji and of the former Hara collection of Toyooka, all of them with their current whereabouts unknown. In Chapter Two, I provide a detailed reconstruction of the original temple spaces based on the features of the extant paintings, then proceed to disentangle the modalities of Ōkyo’s workshop production as the context from which the Kiun’in paintings likely originated. Comparison of large-scale landscape paintings reveals that much of Ōkyo’s approach relied on reuse of complete compositions, or at least, individual motifs. I argue that the Kiun’in paintings were possibly painted by disciples.
Chapter Three provides glimpses on primary source material written during Ōkyo’s lifetime by his most important patrons: Banshi (1761-1773) by Prince Abbot Yūjō, the diary Onjiki nikki (1787) by Imperial Prince Shinnin and the records of the temple Myōhōin, Myōhōin hinamiki. I argue that little in Banshi allows to conceive of Ōkyo’s art as “modern;” rather, the documents character is shaped by Yūjō’s interest in technical matters of studio painting. Yūjō and Shinnin are connected through familial ties at the court; in addition, attendance data from the Myōhōin hinamiki foreshadows the later rift into a Maruyama school and a Shijō school after Ōkyo’s death. Chapter Four provides a concluding discussion of the significance and context of Ōkyo’s landscape paintings in Buddhist temples. I argue that Ōkyo’s multi-room ensembles for temple interiors are based on artistic convention and spatial hierarchies that are comparable to approaches of the Kano school, and suggest that response to nature, such as allusion to topographical surroundings of a building, usually played a subordinate role. Ōkyo’s art depended on the appreciation of ancient Chinese culture, and closely related to the intellectual outlook of the court of Emperor Kōkaku.
Table of contentsList of Figures iii
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction 1
Previous Scholarship 5
Genre Definitions 11
Style, Space and Meaning 22
Chapter One: Fragments and Remainders: Snow Landscape at the Chiba City Museum of Art 27
I. Description, Sequence of Panels and Spatial Arrangement 29
II. Overview: The Enman’in Period 40
Defining the Enman’in Period Landscape Style 45
Does Snow Landscape Belong in the Enman’in Period? 54
III. Analysis and Comparison 57
The Shōkokuji Case: Snow Landscape vs Winter Landscape 57
Missing Snow Landscape at Daijōji 64
The Daiun'in Problem: Ōkyo’s Studio or Not? 76
IV. Conclusion 81
Chapter Two: The Kiun'in Paintings: Workshop Production in Ōkyo’s Large-Scale Ink Landscapes 85
I. The Reconstruction of Space: The Kiun’in Paintings in Their Original Context 89
Inside the Hōjō: The Kiun'in Paintings, Room by Room 95 The Two-Character Seal "Ōkyo" and the Signature 107
Kiun'in, Kiunji or Kiun'an? 114
II. Compositional Pattern and Re-use of Motifs: Ōkyo’s Workshop Production 121
Lake Biwa-Type Landscapes and Related Works 123
Pine Trees and Snowy Mountains: Re-Use of Motifs, Continued 133
III. Conclusion 141
Chapter Three: Text Documents on Ōkyo 147
I. Banshi (Journal of Ten Thousand Things, 1761-1773) 148
II. Ōkyo and Myōhōin, 1785-1795 160 Onjiki Nikki: The Diary of Imperial Prince Shinnin of Myōhōin (1787) 164
Myōhōin Hinamiki (Records of Myōhōin, 1785-1795) 174
III. Conclusion 180
Chapter Four: Landscape and Meaning in Ōkyo’s Large-Scale Paintings 183
I. Ōkyo’s Repertoire and Response to Nature 185
II. Composite Worlds: Ōkyo’s Landscapes Between Chinese and Japanese Stereotypes 198
III. Conclusion 214
Postscript 217
Figures 220
Bibliography 323
Appendix A: Banshi (Journal of Ten Thousand Things, 1761-1773) 334
Appendix B: The Diary of Imperial Prince Shinnin of Myōhōin (1787) 353
Appendix C: Biography of Maruyama Ōkyo (Okamura Hōsui, early 19th century) 368
Glossary 377
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8FN2Q59
Hits109
Created date2023.05.08
Modified date2024.06.21



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