Page 37 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
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涅槃寂静 | THE COLLECTION OF DAVID AND NAYDA UTTERBERG (LOTs 1-20)







 7

 GYOKUEN BONPO (JAPAN CA. 1348-AFTER 1420)
 Orchids and Rock
 Signed Gyokuen..., sealed Gyokuen, Chisokuga and another seal
 Hanging scroll; ink on paper
 28¬ x 12¬ in. (72.6 x 34 cm.)

 $200,000-300,000
 玉畹梵芳筆 蘭石図

 PROVENANCE:
 London Gallery, Tokyo, 23 Aug. 2004
 LITERATURE:
 Julia Meech, “David Scott Utterberg (1946–2019): A Very Private
 Collector” Impressions 42, Part Two of a Double Issue (2021) www.
 japaneseartsoc.org, pp. 77–99, fig. 19.

 Bonpo was an elite Zen monk of the first quarter of the fifteenth
 century. At some time between 1405 and 1409, he became abbot of
 the prestigious Kyoto monastery Ken’nin-ji. In 1413, he was made
 abbot of Nanzen-ji, the powerful Zen temple in the eastern hills
 of Kyoto. He was closely associated with the shogun Yoshimochi,
 who attended Bonpo’s inaugural ceremony at Nanzen-ji. The
 names of two Nanzen-ji subtemples—the Chisoku-ken and the
 Shorin-in—appear on two of Bonpo’s seals; he later retired to
 Toro-an, a subtemple he built within the grounds of Nanzen-
 ji. At age 72, in the spring of 1420, he was forced to leave
 Kyoto abruptly. He withdrew to a small temple in nearby Omi
 province (Shiga Prefecture) and was not heard from again. There
 is speculation that he ran afoul of the shogun on the political issue
 of ecclesiastical versus secular powers. He presumably died shortly
 thereafter.
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