White Poppies on Gold Ground
Ogata Kōrin
About this artwork
Ogata Kōrin's *White Poppies on Ground* is a masterful six-panel folding screen from Edo period (1615–1868), a time of relative peace and prosperity that fostered lavish decorative arts for elite homes and tea houses. Created with vibrant colors on paper, this exemplifies Kōrin's affiliation with the Rinpa school known for its bold, stylized depictions of nature. The luminous gold ground evokes opulence, mimicking sheets of gold leaf traditionally used to symbolize purity and the divine, while the delicate white poppies—rare in Japanese flora—float asymmetrically across the panels, creating a sense of ethereal movement. Kōrin's technique shines in his rhythmic brushwork and flattened perspective, where flowers overlap in harmonious clusters rather than realistic depth, prioritizing decorative beauty over naturalism. This approach influenced generations of artists, blending literati elegance with merchant-class extravagance. Folding screens like this *byōbu* were not mere decorations but functional room dividers, transforming interiors into immersive gardens. Housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Asian Art collection, gifted from the H.O. Havemeyer Collection in 1949, *White Poppies* invites viewers to appreciate Edo Japan's fusion of artistry and luxury— a blooming testament to fleeting beauty.