ITO JAKUCHU (1716-1800)
ITO JAKUCHU (1716-1800)
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Property from an Important Private Japanese Collection
ITO JAKUCHU (1716-1800)

Rooster and Branch

Details
ITO JAKUCHU (1716-1800)
Rooster and Branch
Signed Heian Jakuchu sei; sealed To Jokin in and Jakuchu koji
Hanging scroll; ink, color and powdered-shell gesso (gofun) on silk
15 ¾ x 21 5⁄8 in. (40.2 x 55.5 cm.) painitng only
Provenance
Christie's New York, 18 April 2018, lot 10
Aquired by the current owner from the above

Brought to you by

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

Lot Essay

Jakuchu grew up in a prosperous merchant household in Kyoto’s Nishiki-koji district, at the center of a bustling fish and vegetable market. A devout Buddhist with no interest in commerce or the pleasure quarters, he took up painting full time in his mid-thirties and was obsessively absorbed in his work for over half a century. As for his subject matter, it seems that he raised chickens at home. They play a significant role in his oeuvre.
His white rooster is considered an early work, because the artist was not yet painting on the reverse of the silk (ura-saishiki), a technique he introduced later to create more vibrant colors. Some of the white pigment (gofun) has either fallen off or been removed during cleaning.
This painting is said to have belonged to the well-known American scholar Richard Lane (1926-2002), who lived in Kyoto and whose collection of Japanese art is now in the Honolulu Museum of Art. (For a brief biography of Lane, see Impressions, the journal of the Japanese Art Society of America, no. 26 (2004) www.japaneseartsoc.org.

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