
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Friends Visiting in the Mountains
Ike Taiga
- Date
- mid 18th century
- Medium
- Hanging scroll, ink and color on paper
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
Ike Taiga uses almost the complete pictorial space to create a mountain landscape. The foreground is dominated by several tall trees, which tower over two wanderers at the bottom of the picture, making their way up to the residence in the upper part of the image. Taiga was during his lifetime one of the most prominent members of the literati ( bunjin ) art scene in Kyoto. Born into a middle-class family in Kyoto, he received an excellent education in classical Chinese literature and poetry, which laid the foundation for his life-long passion for Chinese culture and painting. Taiga started to learn calligraphy as early as the age of six, and began to study painting by the age of 14, relying on Chinese painting manuals such as the “Mustard Seed Garden Painting Manual” (Chin. Jiezi yuan huazhuan, Jap. Kaishien gaden ). Japan, Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Landscape with River View
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Heart Sutra and Landscape
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Bamboo Endures the Frost
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Landscape with Gentle Peaks
Cleveland Museum of Art

Fishing in Springtime
Cleveland Museum of Art

Mountain Wandering
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Landscape with Houses in a Ravine
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Reverberations of Taiga
Cleveland Museum of Art

Reverberations of Taiga, Volume 2 (leaf 7)
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Four Accomplishments
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Snowy Landscape
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Portraits of Ike Taiga and His Calligraphies in Seal and Grass Styles
Minneapolis Institute of Art