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| hatsuboku@¬n | ||||||
| KEY WORD :@art history / paintings | ||||||
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|  Ch: 
pomo. Lit. splashed ink. An ink painting *suibokuga 
nζ technique in which ink is spattered from the hand, a brush, or other implement 
to render the feeling of volume and texture of rocks and mountains. The Chinese 
painter, Wang Mo  (Jp: Ou Boku €n; ?-ca.804), is customarily associated with the 
origins of splashed ink. The technique was first used to depict landscape forms, 
but it came to be used to render costumes in Zen and Taoist figure painting 
*doushakuga Ήίζ. Both 
the splashed ink and broken ink *haboku 
jn techniques can be read pomo in Chinese, and considerable confusion has arisen 
over their use in documents. In Japan, these techniques eventually came to refer 
to one technique of laying on successive ink washes. A hanging scroll of The 
Broken Ink Landscape Haboku sansui-zu jnR
} by Sesshuu Touyou αMk (1420-1506) 
in Tokyo National Museum is a well-known example of the splashed ink technique, 
in spite of its title. | 
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| REFERENCES: | ||||||
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| EXTERNAL LINKS: | ||||||
| Haboku sansui|zu jnR } at Tokyo National Museum | ||||||
| NOTES: | ||||||
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission. fΪΜeLXgEΚ^ECXgΘΗASΔΜRecΜ³f‘»E]ΪπΦΆά·B  | 
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