Artwork Replica River Landscape in Evening, 501 by Kano Motonobu (1476-1559) | WahooArt.com

    + 33 606 606 707  
English
Français
Deutsch
Italiano
Español
中国
Português
日本
Zoom inZoom inZoom inZoom in
Zoom outZoom outZoom outZoom out
Go homeGo homeGo homeGo home
Toggle full pageToggle full pageToggle full pageToggle full page
"River Landscape in Evening"

Kano Motonobu - Paper (i) - 151.1cm x 51.1cm - 501

This monochrome Japanese landscape painting portrays the activities of an imagined riverside locale in China. We "enter" the picture at lower right, where a man is ferried across the river toward luxurious buildings at lower left. A friend, seen through the open windows of a two-story pavilion, awaits his arrival and the beginning of an intimate evening gathering. Across the river in the right-hand middleground, fishermen have moored their thatched boats at shore at the end of the workday and walk inland toward two rustic cottages tucked into a grove of trees—a fishing village, in the vocabularly of East Asian landscape painting. Zigzagging back to the left as we move up the composition and further into the distance along the river, a cluster of low-lying, hillside buildings hints at another village, the destination for two more boats seen at upper right. The painting bears the seal of Kano Motonobu, second-generation head of the Kano school, a formidable painting workshop that emerged in the late 1400s and dominated mainstream Japanese painting for the next four hundred years. However, a significant amount of overpainting added to the work over the centuries makes its attribution especially difficult. In some passages, heavy retouching completely masks the "original" image, which may have been painted in the Japanese capital of Kyoto in the 1500s, preventing an analysis of the artist"s original brushwork.

 




Loading Kano Motonobu biography....

 

-