Sessō Tōyō, Haboku-style
landscape, a hanging scroll
painting
Japan
Muromachi period,
15th century AD
An early work by the great ink painter
Sesshū?
For the
haboku ('broken
ink') style, the artist uses no outlines, but instead
relies on areas of splashed ink wash and layers of ink shading to
create the three-dimensional impression of mountains, trees, and
rocks in a landscape. The technique involves a remarkable economy
of brushwork, and it is because of this shorthand nature that it is
described as haboku
(broken ink) or
hatsuboku (flung
ink).
This work has
affinities in its composition and technique with a landscape by
Shūbun (flourished 1414-63), with an inscription by Kōsai Ryūha
(1375-1446) (Private Collection, Tokyo). However, that work has a
larger and more confident scale, a more coherent relationship of
foreground to middle-ground and is stylistically more advanced.
There are stronger resemblances to a painting with a square seal
reading 'Sessō' in the Masaki Art Gallery, Osaka
Prefecture - in the shape of the trees and mountains, the very dark
ink tones, and even the paper. The similarities are such that the
two works appear to have been painted by the same artist.
'Sessō Tōyō' is now generally held to have been the
name used by the greatest ink painter of the Muromachi period
(1333-1568), Sesshū Tōyō (1420-1506), during the first half of his
career. before he went to
China.
Although the seal
here reads 'Shūbun', the surrounding paper is very
rough and scratched, suggesting it has perhaps been tampered with.
If this is indeed a painting by Sesshū, it represents an very
significant example of this master's early
work.
I. Hirayama and T. Kobayashi (eds.), Hizō Nihon bijutsu taikan-2, vol. 3 (Tokyo, Kodansha, 1993)