Tiger, 1500s. Creator: Sesson Sh?kei (Japanese, 1504-1589).

Tiger, 1500s. Creator: Sesson Sh?kei (Japanese, 1504-1589).

2-746-147 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Tiger, 1500s. This screen with a tiger and its pair with a dragon together represent the elements of water and wind in Chinese cosmology: the dragon’s swirling form conjures rain clouds, and the tiger embodies the wind’s terrible, unpredictable force. Former CMA director Sherman Lee found in Sesson’s paintings intimations of a developing Japanese style distinct from Chinese predecessors. Here, parody and pattern are at the forefront. The formidable, awe-inspiring tiger takes on the demeanor of a curious house cat, and a once-snarling dragon’s face morphs into an oddly befuddled human expression. Such exaggerated, humorously rendered faces suggest a gentle domestication of these primal forces. Lee described Sesson’s work as inhabiting a world of aesthetic awareness, in which brushstroke and pattern are primary and where waves are "arranged in graceful and rhythmically repetitive reflex curves, primarily decorative shapes and only secondarily water and foam."


Image Details


Medium
  1. Ink on paper
  2. Pair of six-panel folding screens

Picture Type
  1. Painting

Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 6610x3309
File Size : 64,080kb


Aliases

  1. 1959.136.2
  1. 135594
  1. 0940014629
  1. 1959.136.2
  1. 2-746-147
  1. 2746147

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