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Aoki Shukuya was a top student of painter Ike Taiga and took responsibility for Taiga’s stylistic legacy. A painting album by Taiga, part of which survives today in Kyoto in hanging scroll format, served as the source for this painting by Shukuya and the matching designs from a set of wood-block–printed volumes published in 1804. The postscript to the books, written and carved by the scholar Minagawa Kien (皆川淇園) (1735–1807), explains that Taiga produced the original album for his wife and fellow painter Tokuyama Gyokuran (徳山玉瀾) (1727/28–1784).<br><br>Complex rock formations are accompanied by the text “Guo’s method for alunite” (郭法礬石) in a design from the second volume of the wood-block–printed set and Shukuya’s painting. This is a reference to the Northern Song–dynasty (960–1127) painter Guo Xi (郭熙) (Chinese, about 1020–1090) and a pale, often whitish mineral that forms naturally when volcanic rocks are altered by hot, acidic water.

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Page
1
Source index
0
Type
photo
Media ID
68888af419b83fbb
Size
unknown

Document data

ID
149702
Core
obj
Type
object
DTO data
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    "title": "Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 1 (leaf 23)",
    "description": "Aoki Shukuya was a top student of painter Ike Taiga and took responsibility for Taiga’s stylistic legacy. A painting album by Taiga, part of which survives today in Kyoto in hanging scroll format, served as the source for this painting by Shukuya and the matching designs from a set of wood-block–printed volumes published in 1804. The postscript to the books, written and carved by the scholar Minagawa Kien (皆川淇園) (1735–1807), explains that Taiga produced the original album for his wife and fellow painter Tokuyama Gyokuran (徳山玉瀾) (1727/28–1784).<br><br>Complex rock formations are accompanied by the text “Guo’s method for alunite” (郭法礬石) in a design from the second volume of the wood-block–printed set and Shukuya’s painting. This is a reference to the Northern Song–dynasty (960–1127) painter Guo Xi (郭熙) (Chinese, about 1020–1090) and a pale, often whitish mineral that forms naturally when volcanic rocks are altered by hot, acidic water.",
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Context sent to Scholar

Document identity
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    "label": "Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 1 (leaf 23)",
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Document source metadata
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    "contentType": "object",
    "title": "Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 1 (leaf 23)",
    "description": "Aoki Shukuya was a top student of painter Ike Taiga and took responsibility for Taiga’s stylistic legacy. A painting album by Taiga, part of which survives today in Kyoto in hanging scroll format, served as the source for this painting by Shukuya and the matching designs from a set of wood-block–printed volumes published in 1804. The postscript to the books, written and carved by the scholar Minagawa Kien (皆川淇園) (1735–1807), explains that Taiga produced the original album for his wife and fellow painter Tokuyama Gyokuran (徳山玉瀾) (1727/28–1784).<br><br>Complex rock formations are accompanied by the text “Guo’s method for alunite” (郭法礬石) in a design from the second volume of the wood-block–printed set and Shukuya’s painting. This is a reference to the Northern Song–dynasty (960–1127) painter Guo Xi (郭熙) (Chinese, about 1020–1090) and a pale, often whitish mineral that forms naturally when volcanic rocks are altered by hot, acidic water.",
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Document source extras
{
    "tec": "double-leaf from a pair of albums; ink and light color on paper",
    "tombstone": "(大雅餘韻): Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 1 (leaf 23), mid-1700s–1802. Aoki Shukuya (Japanese, d. 1802). Double-leaf from a pair of albums; ink and light color on paper; album, closed: 28.3 x 33 cm (11 1/8 x 13 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Andrew R. and Martha Holden Jennings Fund, 1979.73.1.23",
    "seriesInOriginalLanguage": "大雅餘韻",
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        {
            "inscription": "郭法礬石",
            "inscription_translation": "Guo’s method for alunite",
            "inscription_remark": "This is a reference to the Northern Song–dynasty (960–1127) painter Guo Xi (郭熙) (Chinese, about 1020–1090) and a pale, often whitish mineral that forms naturally when volcanic rocks are altered by hot, acidic water.",
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    "didYouKnow": "Traditionally, young painters in Japan began their studies with an established master painter. The master's compositions invariably became models that the apprentice copied to learn various ink and brush techniques.",
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Page context
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