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Use of Reproductions and Digital Contents

1-9
Cypress Trees

Reproduction

Title Cypress Trees
Quantity A pair of four-fold screens
Date 2021
Production Canon Inc.

Original Work

Designation National treasure
Artist/Excavation Site By Kano Eitoku (1543-90)
Collection Tokyo National Museum
Medium Color and gold leaf on paper
Date Azuchi-Momoyama period, dated 1590 (Tensho 18)
Collection Ref. No. A-1069

Overview

This work of striking power and opulence aptly represents the art of the Azuchi-Momoyama period, when the monumental culture of Japan's warrior class blossomed. A magnificent cypress tree with a billowing trunk and sprawling boughs lies against a backdrop of gold-leafed ground and clouds. The tree exudes an overwhelmingly-powerful sense of vitality, like a huge writhing snake. The only motifs on display are the cypress tree, some boulders, and the ultramarine surface of the water. By minimizing the number of colors and simplifying the background, the artist creates the impression that the tree is surging ever nearer to the viewer. A closer inspection reveals sections where the paint has peeled off. This suggests the tree was once even thicker with verdant leaves. The work may have been even more striking when first painted. This is thought to be a very late work by Kano Eitoku, the most famous painter of the time. Though the work is now mounted on screens, it was originally a sliding-door painting in the residence of the Katsuranomiya family, or the Hachijonomiya family as it was formerly known, who were court nobles in Kyoto. It originally adorned 4 sliding doors but was subsequently remounted on an 8-panelled screen. It suffered considerable wear and tear in recent years, so major restoration work was carried out in 2013.Upon restoring this painting, it was mounted on two separate screens in order to remedy the problem of misalignment of the composition where the panels met, and partly for conservation purposes.