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jitsugetsu sansui-zu 日月山水図 | ||||||
KEY WORD : art history / paintings | ||||||
Also
jitsugetsu-zu 日月図. A pictorial subject that combines the motifs of
the sun and moon in landscapes of the four seasons. Documentary references
or extant examples of the subject are rare. Usually, the subject appeared
in the folding screen *byoubu
屏風 format. In a pair of folding screens spring and summer landscape
is depicted with a golden sun on the right , while a scene of autumn and
winter is painted with a silver moon, either full or crescent, on the left
screen. Gold and silver leaf *haku
箔 or thin plates itakane 板金 are used to render the sun and moon.
Although landscapes depicted in the four seasons are in the tradition of
*yamato-e やまと絵 (see
*shiki-e 四季絵) , the
unusual contrast of the sun and the moon in one set of paintings is thought
by some scholars to have symbolic meaning and to have been adopted from
the iconic renderings of Shinto shrines depicted as a type of *mandara
曼荼羅 (see *Shintou bijutsu
神道美術). Others believe the juxtaposition is purely decorative and probably
derives from works of lacquer or other crafts. The oldest extant example
is the pair of six-fold screens at Kongouji 金剛寺
(15c) in Osaka, which have long been used only during the esoteric Buddhist ceremony
known as kanjou 潅頂 ceremony (see *byoubu-e
屏風絵). Another well-known example is the pair of screens in the Tokyo National
Museum. The pair was probably not original but from two different sets.
They are important as rare examples of screen painting which predate the
flourishing of large scale painting in the Momoyama period. See *shouhekiga
障壁画. |
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. No reproduction or republication without written permission. 掲載のテキスト・写真・イラストなど、全てのコンテンツの無断複製・転載を禁じます。 |
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