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| ippin 逸品 | ||||||
| KEY WORD : art history / paintings | ||||||
|  Ch: yipin. Also ikkaku 逸格 (Ch: yige). Lit. 
the Untrammeled Class. A category or ranking of quality in Chinese painting and 
calligraphy. The Untrammeled Class exists in an ambiguous relationship with 
the more orthodox *sanpin 
三品 or Three Categories. Chinese critics after the Northern Song set 
the ippin as a higher rank within the same critical framework. The term 
seems to have been coined by the Tang dynasty critic Li Suchen (Jp: Ri Shishin 李嗣真, 
late 7c) and was originally applied to poetry as well as painting and calligraphy. 
Ippin generally implies an aberrant style of painting unrestrained by conventional 
rules, and is used to describe the sketchy rendering of form that spontaneously 
grasps the natural essence of visual phenomena. Painting in the ippin style, 
ippin gafuu 逸品画風, flourished from the late Tang (9c) to the early 
Yuan (13c), particularly in figure painting where it was favored by Zen 禅 (Ch: Chan) 
Buddhist artists. The painting of Two Patriarchs  Niso Choushin-zu 
二祖調心図 (Tokyo National Museum) a close copy after Shi Ke  (Jp: Seki Kaku  石恪, act 
mid-10c), is a well-known work of this type. The ippin style also is seen 
in landscape, as illustrated by the paintings of Mi Fu  (Jp: Bei Futsu  米ふつ, 1051-1107) 
and Yujien  (Jp: Gyokukan 玉澗, act mid-13c). Because ippin painting denied 
the necessity of close fidelity to perceived objects it can be seen as a key concept 
behind expressive painting of the Song and later periods, as well as influential 
in developments in Japanese ink-painting *suibokuga 
水墨画. | 
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