Product Description

7149 A two-fold paper screen painted in colour on a gold ground with take (bamboo)

Signed: Fukunen sha

Seal: Fukuen

Japan Taishō/Shōwa period 20th century

Dimensions: H.36¼” x W.78½” (91.5cm x 199cm)

Konishi Fukunen (1887-1959). Born in Fukui prefecture, he studied under the renowned Maruyama school master Suzuki Shonen (1849-1918) and excelled in kachōga (bird and flower) paintings. He was one of the founders of Kyoto style Nihonga.

Take (bamboo) in Taoism and to a lesser extent in Buddhism symbolises the notion of emptiness, this is due to the tube-like structure of the bamboo. Just as the tao (the ineffable ‘way’ of Taoism) arises from nothing and returns to emptiness, the bamboo is empty at its core. In East Asian philosophy such emptiness is perceived in a positive rather than a negative light. It is also a symbol of purification.

Haiku by Otagaki Rengetsu (1791-1875) written at the age of 80 (1870)

This gentleman
Grows and grows
Most auspiciously
Learn from him and
You, too, will flourish for ever.