Three Friends of Winter [left of a pair]

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Three Friends of Winter [left of a pair]

Yamamoto Baiitsu

Date
first half of 19th century
Medium
Six-panel folding screen, one of a pair, ink with flecks of gold pigment on paper
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

In East Asia, pine, bamboo, and plum are known as the “three friends of winter.” In addition to their individual auspicious connotations—chaste pine, upright bamboo, and pure plum—each of these three plants is also celebrated for remaining vigorous even during winter and adding color to an otherwise lifeless landscape. They thus represent the Confucian ideal of tenacity in spite of adversity. Yamamoto Baiitsu’s paintings show his familiarity with the colorful, detailed mode of bird-and-flower painting popularized by Shen Nanpin (1682–1758), an influential Chinese painter briefly active in Japan. In this pair of screens, decorative qualities are balanced with a sense of order and clarity: the rough bark of the plum provides a textural foil to the blossoms, while the arching form of the pine is mirrored in the flow of the stream.

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