Winter 2000/01 Exhibition

Nukina Kaioku, Winter Landscape After a Yuan Master
Nukina Kaioku (1778-1863)
Winter landscape after a
Yuan master

Hanging scroll

Nanga: The Art of the Japanese Literati
from the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

November 7, 2000 – February 3, 2001

From November 7, 2000 until February 3, 2001, The Clark Center for Japanese Art is hosting an exhibition of later Edo period Japanese hanging scrolls and folding screen paintings influenced by the literati paintings of China.

Nanga, meaning literally "Southern Painting," is one of the five most important painting genres in Edo Japan (1603-1868), yet until recently has been relatively ignored in art historical studies. Nanga artists sought to emulate the Chinese scholar's character and spirit in their works. According to the scholar's ideal, these paintings were not made for sale or mere decorative pleasure, but to express the artist's style and inner spirit. On view are calligraphies and paintings by some of the major artists working in this style, as well as by other lesser known, but equally as significant scholar-painters.

The exhibition combines works from the Center's permanent collection, as well as scrolls from the esteemed collection of Professor Stephen Addiss and Audrey Seo. Our current exhibition has been designed to illustrate how the Clark Center's potential acquisition of the Addiss-Seo Collection of Nanga paintings could complement the current holdings within the Center's permanent collection (derived primarily from the collection of noted East Asian painting scholar James Cahill, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Berkeley).

Kameda Bôsai, Long Life
Kameda Bôsai (1752-1826)
Long Life
Hanging scroll

Matsumura Goshun, Two Crows
Matsumura Goshun (1752-1811)
Two Crows
Hanging scroll

Gallery hours: Tuesday through Saturday 1 – 5 pm. Closed on national holidays and during the month of August.
Admission: $5 for adults, $3 for students with valid ID. Children 12 and under free.
Weekly docent tours are held Saturdays at 1 pm and guided group tours can be arranged by calling the Center in advance at (559) 582-4915.