Dragon [right of the pair Dragon and Tiger]

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Dragon [right of the pair Dragon and Tiger]

Painter: Yamada Dōan

Date
16th century
Medium
Six-panel folding screen, one of a pair, ink on paper
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

In traditional Chinese cosmology, the tiger and the dragon are two of four creatures associated with the cardinal directions. The tiger is the emblem of the west, and the dragon, the east. In Zen Buddhism, however, the tiger came to be associated with the earthbound enlightened mind, and the dragon the soaring spirit of the freed satoric soul. Consequently, images of tigers and dragons are frequently encountered in Zen temples in Japan. Although this masterful painting is signed, varying biographical accounts of three generations of artists who used the same name obscures the exact identity of the artist, Yamada Dōan. Nevertheless, the vigorous brushwork here suggests that it was painted during the mid-16th century. Asia

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