Birds and Flowers

Cleveland Museum of Art

Birds and Flowers

Kano Mitsunobu

Date
late 1500s
Medium
One of a pair of six-panel folding screens; ink, color, and gold on paper
Culture
Japan, Momoyama period (1573–1615)
Department
Japanese Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

The landscape depicted in this pair of screens follows a seasonal progression from right to left, starting with the blossoming plum of early spring and ending with late autumn peonies. A variety of smaller birds are positioned throughout the scene, and a trio of swimming ducks is bracketed by early summer irises and early autumn bellflowers at the center. While some raptors (birds of prey) terrorize a pheasant and an egret (a waterfowl) to the right, a peacock and peahen converse to the left. Hawks are associated with military prowess, while the peafowl suggest cultural prestige. As masters of the Kano academic painting style, both Kano Shōei and Kano Mitsunobu favored Chinese-inspired subject matter, such as birds and flowers.

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