Harvard Art Museums > 1.2016.2: Bunpō gafu nihen (Model Sketches by Bunpō vol.2) Prints Collections Search Exit Deep Zoom Mode Zoom Out Zoom In Reset Zoom Full Screen Add to Collection Order Image Copy Link Copy Citation Citation"Bunpō gafu nihen (Model Sketches by Bunpō vol.2) (Kawamura Bunpō 河村文鳳) , 1.2016.2,” Harvard Art Museums collections online, Dec 18, 2024, https://hvrd.art/o/355770. Reuse via IIIF Toggle Deep Zoom Mode Download This object does not yet have a description. Identification and Creation Object Number 1.2016.2 People Kawamura Bunpō 河村文鳳, Japanese (1779 - 1821) Title Bunpō gafu nihen (Model Sketches by Bunpō vol.2) Other Titles Original Language Title: 文鳳画譜 二編 Classification Prints Work Type book Date 1807-1813 Period Edo period, 1615-1868 Culture Japanese Persistent Link https://hvrd.art/o/355770 Location Location Level 2, Room 2600, East Asian Art, East Asian Painting and Decorative Arts View this object's location on our interactive map Physical Descriptions Medium Woodblock printed book; ink and light color on paper Technique Woodblock print Dimensions 26.4 × 18 cm (10 3/8 × 7 1/16 in.) Inscriptions and Marks inscription: 林正忠 Provenance Recorded Ownership History [Hayashi Tadamasa, Tokyo and Paris, (b.1853- d.1906)], sold; to Henry Rivière, Paris ( b.1864- d.1951). [Israel Goldman Japanese Prints, London, (by 2014], sold; to Private Collection, Arlington, MA, 2014. Acquisition and Rights Credit Line Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Anonymous loan Object Number 1.2016.2 Division Asian and Mediterranean Art Contact am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu Permissions The Harvard Art Museums encourage the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request. Descriptions Description Volume two of a set of three; yellow covers with burnished design of clouds. Finely printed in ink and light colors, Bunpō’s illustrated books deliver visual anthologies of the idealized world of the Chinese scholar-gentleman in his signature genial style. Bunpō’s Chinese-style ink landscapes are meant as much for contemplation by the armchair literatus as for the reference of those actually deploying their brush and ink stones, while he conveys the humanity of his figures in a few economic brushstrokes, laden with as much wry commentarial humor as ink. Bunpō’s woodblock printed books made icons of Sinophile literati culture available for purchase by the aspiring Japanese scholar-gentleman. The book in question, Bunpō gafu, was published in three volumes between 1807 and 1813 and represents a landmark in Bunpō’s career. The publisher of volume one promised a full series of ten volumes. Although ultimately only three volumes were produced, together they present almost one hundred images demonstrating Bunpō’s mastery of the three major genres of literati painting: landscapes, figures, and birds and flowers. The printing in ink and light colors shares the restricted palette of his paintings, and captures the combination of “the rough and the refined” that critics described as the hallmark of his brushwork. Collectively, the three volumes present the numerous elements and types that populate his paintings as images in their own right. The catalog of lively Sinophilic images notably includes an unusual series of “portraits” of the many scholar-gentleman participants of the touchstone literati gathering, the poetry party held at the Orchid Pavilion by the legendary Chinese calligrapher, Wang Xizhi in the year 353. Bunpō also adds a humorous parenthetical visual commentary to the many close studies of conventional literati painting subjects including bamboo, inebriated sages, and mountain landscapes, by the inclusion of a series of three images depicting a crowded contemporary Kyoto salon hang, from preparation though installation, to the arrival of the many chattering spectators who have clearly come as much to be looked at as to view the paintings on display. References: Tinios, Ellis. Kawamura Bumpō: Artist of Two Worlds. Leeds: The University Gallery Leeds, 2004 Exhibition History 32Q: 2600 East Asian, Japanese, Chinese and Korean, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 12/01/2016 - 03/02/2017; Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 12/02/2024 - 06/01/2025 Related Works 1.2016 Kawamura Bunpō 河村文鳳 Bunpō gafu (Model Sketches by Bunpō) Prints Verification Level This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of Asian and Mediterranean Art at am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu