k Scenes from the quotTales of Isequot, mid1600s. Creator Unknown. Scenes from the quotTales of Isequot, mid1600s. While the 11th century Tale of Genji is universally regarded as Japans literary masterpiece, the source for visual imagery in Japanese culture is rivaled by another literary classic, the Tales of Ise . A 10th century anthology of poems interspersed with commentary, the Ise portrays the emotional and geographical journey of a courtier from the capital Kyoto into the countryside and beyond. The poems describe features of the natural, untamed terrain, linking them to the rather melancholy state of the traveler. Since the Tales of Ise wasx2014and remains todayx2014well read by educated Japanese, a person viewing these folding screens would immediately recognize its subject, organized as a series of discrete scenes read from right to left. Neither a signature nor a seal identifies the artist, but judging from related paintings, the work can be ascribed to an artist working in Kyoto during the first quarter of the 17th century in the manner of the painter Iwasa Matabei 15781650. This type of historical narrative composition became quite popular around 1600 among patrons favoring a distinctly Japanese style of painting which employed rich mineral pigments and a liberal use of gold. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Scenes from the  quot Tales of Ise quot , mid 1600s. Creator: Unknown. Scenes from the  quot Tales of Ise quot , mid 1600s. While the 11th century  Tale of Genji  is universally regarded as Japan s literary masterpiece, the source for visual imagery in Japanese culture is rivaled by another literary classic, the  Tales of Ise . A 10th century anthology of poems interspersed with commentary, the Ise portrays the emotional and geographical journey of a courtier from the capital  Kyoto  into the countryside and beyond. The poems describe features of the natural, untamed terrain, linking them to the rather melancholy state of the traveler.   Since the  Tales of Ise  was  x2014 and remains today  x2014 well read by educated Japanese, a person viewing these folding screens would immediately recognize its subject, organized as a series of discrete scenes read from right to left. Neither a signature nor a seal identifies the artist, but judging from related paintings, the work can be ascribed to an artist working in Kyoto during the first quarter of the 17th century in the manner of the painter Iwasa Matabei  1578 1650 . This type of historical narrative composition became quite popular around 1600 among patrons favoring a distinctly Japanese style of painting which employed rich mineral pigments and a liberal use of gold.
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Scenes from the "Tales of Ise", mid-1600s. Creator: Unknown.

Scenes from the "Tales of Ise", mid-1600s. While the 11th century Tale of Genji is universally regarded as Japan's literary masterpiece, the source for visual imagery in Japanese culture is rivaled by another literary classic, the Tales of Ise . A 10th century anthology of poems interspersed with commentary, the Ise portrays the emotional and geographical journey of a courtier from the capital (Kyoto) into the countryside and beyond. The poems describe features of the natural, untamed terrain, linking them to the rather melancholy state of the traveler. Since the Tales of Ise was—and remains today—well read by educated Japanese, a person viewing these folding screens would immediately recognize its subject, organized as a series of discrete scenes read from right to left. Neither a signature nor a seal identifies the artist, but judging from related paintings, the work can be ascribed to an artist working in Kyoto during the first quarter of the 17th century in the manner of the painter Iwasa Matabei (1578-1650). This type of historical narrative composition became quite popular around 1600 among patrons favoring a distinctly Japanese style of painting which employed rich mineral pigments and a liberal use of gold.

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27-03-2020

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