松村呉春筆 山樵漁夫図屏風|Woodcutters and Fishermen

Matsumura Goshun

ca. 1790–95

松村呉春筆 山樵漁夫図屏風|Woodcutters and Fishermen by Matsumura Goshun

Medium

Pair of six-panel folding screens; ink and color on paper

Dimensions

Image (each): 65 15/16 in. × 12 ft. 2 7/16 in. (167.5 × 372 cm) Overall with mounting: 67 1/2 in. × 12 ft. 4 in. (171.5 × 376 cm)

Classification

Paintings

Culture & Period

Japan · Edo period (1615–1868)

Department

Asian Art

Museum

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Mary Griggs Burke Collection, Gift of the Mary and Jackson Burke Foundation, 2015

Accession Number

2015.300.206.1, .2

Tags

MenTrees

About this artwork

This pair of six-panel folding screens depicts woodcutters trudging among pines and fishermen relaxing on a small boat, set against rolling hills and an enclosed lagoon during early spring. Chinese fishermen and woodcutters, their faces weathered and animated, move through a hazy landscape where linear perspective indicative of Maruyama Ōkyo's influence melds with the lyricism absorbed from Yosa Buson. Matsumura Goshun, born to a family of officials at the government mint, studied with literati ...

Art Historical Context

In the tranquil haze of early spring, Matsumura Goshun's *Woodcutters and Fishermen*ca. 1790–95) unfolds across a pair of magnificent six-panel folding screens, a hallmark of Edo-period (1615–1868) Japanese art. Weathered Chinese-inspired figures—woodcutters trud among towering pines and fishermen lounging in a small boat—animate a poetic landscape of rolling hills and an enclosed lagoon. Rendered in delicate ink and color on paper these screens measure an imposing 67½ × 148 inches overall, designed to immerse viewers in nature's quiet drama. Goshun, born into a family of government mint offi...

About the Artist

Matsumura Goshun · 17521811

Born in Kyoto, 1752, the eldest son of a prominent family. He studied calligraphy, music, and painting from an early age. His painting studies were under Ōnishi Suigetsu.

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