Open source Elasticsearch & Next.js museum search.
Watanabe Shikō. Flowers and Trees of the Four Seasons (left screen), early to mid-1700s. Six-panel folding screen; ink, color, gold, silver, and gilding on paper, Overall: 155 x 368.5 cm (61 x 145 1/16 in.). Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund, 2021.132.2. CC0.
Flowers and Trees of the Four Seasons (left screen)
early to mid-1700s
Watanabe Shikō
Watanabe Shikō (Japanese, 1683–1755)
Japanese Art
Flowers and Trees of the Four Seasons (left screen), early to mid-1700s. Watanabe Shikō (Japanese, 1683–1755). Six-panel folding screen; ink, color, gold, silver, and gilding on paper; overall: 155 x 368.5 cm (61 x 145 1/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Severance and Greta Millikin Purchase Fund 2021.132.2 The painter Watanabe Shikō had a special interest in scientific realism, based on interactions with his patron Konoe Iehiro. Shikō combined his attention to accurate depiction of plants with strong ink outlines and decorative elements like gold and silver, arriving at an innovative style that influenced many of his peers in the city of Kyoto. One plant in these screens, tumeric, or ukon in Japanese, is found in Okinawa.