Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Depictions of geese usually appear as ink paintings in Japan during the 1200s. They later show up in the colorful landscapes of illustrated handscrolls. Such early ink renditions of the birds have long been associated with classical Chinese Zen painting and poetry, which was avidly admired and collected in medieval Japan. In the screens on display, the artist portrayed the waterfowl in a pastoral setting without reference to classical or religious themes. Such ordinary subjects were imbued with special meaning in 14th- and 15th-century Japan through associations with continental culture, Zen thought and poetry, and famous Chinese monk-painters whose painting techniques had become revered as visual emblems of Zen principles. The screens here reflect the continuation of that painting tradition in the late 1500s or early 1600s by the head of the most important studio in Kyoto. Sanraku also executed a number of colorful folding screen compositions, but here pays homage to the style of early Zen painting.
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Sesshū Tōyō (Japanese, 1420–1506) — Birds and Flowers in a L
Tosa Mitsuyoshi (Japanese, 1539–1613) — Phoenixes and Paulow
Sesshū Tōyō (Japanese, 1420–1506) — Birds and Flowers in a L
Kano Shōei (Japanese, 1519–1592) — Birds and Flowers
Tosa Mitsuyoshi (Japanese, 1539–1613) — Peafowl and Phoenixe
Kano Mitsunobu (Japanese, 1565–1608) — Birds and Flowers
四季花鳥図屏風|Birds and Flowers of the Four Seasons
Yamamoto Baiitsu (Japanese, 1783–1856) — Geese, Reeds, and W
Tosa Mitsuyoshi (Japanese, 1539–1613) — Peacocks and Bamboo
Tsubaki Chinzan
Yi Sumun (Korean, b. c. 1404) — Landscape of the Four Season
Kano Motonobu (Japanese, c. 1476–1559) — Flowers and Birds i