JIUN ONKO (1718-1804)
JIUN ONKO (1718-1804)
JIUN ONKO (1718-1804)
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JIUN ONKO (1718-1804)

Ichi o motte kore o tsuranuku (Focus and persist in one thing)

Details
JIUN ONKO (1718-1804)
Ichi o motte kore o tsuranuku (Focus and persist in one thing)
Sealed Jiun, Shakuin Onko and a illegible seal
Hanging scroll; ink on paper
9 x 20 ¾ in. (23 x 52.6 cm.)
Provenance
Private Collection, United States

Brought to you by

Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

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Lot Essay

Jiun Onko's calligraphy is spirited and powerful. The dark and weighty characters reveal the feathery strokes of dry brush ends. The artist is a highly idiosyncratic practitioner of the Chinese-style, unorthodox expressionist style of Zen masters. He was a scholar of Sanskrit, Confucianism and Buddhism. In 1776, at the age of 58, he established a hermitage at Kokiji Temple in Kawachi, Osaka Prefecture, which he established as the headquarters of his own sect of Shingon Buddhism, Shoboritsu (True Doctrine Discipline). Most of his extant caligraphies derive from his tenure there. For four examples in the Barnet and Burto Collection, see Miyeko Murase, The Written Image: Japanese Calligraphy and Painting from the Sylvan Barnet and William Burto Collection (New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art; New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002), pls. 49-52.

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