Page 39 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 39

涅槃寂静 | THE COLLECTION OF DAVID AND NAYDA UTTERBERG (LOTs 1-20)

















                                                                Bonpo was a highly respected poet, calligrapher and painter,
                                                                renowned in his own day for his orchid paintings, although
                                                                his known body of works is quite small—only about thirty are
                                                                recorded, and they are thought to date from late in his life, around
                                                                1400 to 1420. His persistent repetition of subject matter has been
                                                                likened to a kind of spiritual discipline. There are examples of
                                                                Bonpo’s orchids in the Brooklyn Museum, The Metropolitan
                                                                Museum of Art, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Cleveland
                                                                Museum of Art, Minneapolis Institute of Art and the Freer Gallery
                                                                of Art.

                                                                The Utterberg painting is anchored in one corner by a rocky
                                                                formation with patches of moss, balanced by the artist’s inscription
                                                                at the upper left. Several tall blades flare upward, gyrating through
                                                                the shorter blades to create a sinuous and elegant composition that
                                                                is perfectly balanced, like a floral arrangement. Bamboo leaves
                                                                cap the composition at the upper right, and thorny brambles add
                                                                texture at the lower left. Only a few tiny, fragile orchid blossoms
                                                                appear. Orchids and rocks are cherished in literati lore as symbolic
                                                                of the scholar’s purity of heart, loyalty, and integrity. Epidendrum is
                                                                a wild variety of orchid that grows in East Asia, where it is admired
                                                                for its sweet fragrance and ability to grow even in low-quality soil.
                                                                For this reason, orchids are said to be like ideal gentlemen, whose
                                                                scholarly pursuits stand them in good stead even when the going is
                                                                rough.
                                                                Bonpo paints with swift, impatient strokes that cut across the
                                                                picture surface. One long, supple blade thrusts into the semi-
                                                                cursive calligraphy of his inscription to integrate the two elements
                                                                of his work. Bonpo is thought to have been directly influenced by
                                                                his older contemporary, the 14th-century amateur orchid painter
                                                                Tesshu Tokusai (d. 1366). Tesshu traveled to China, where he is
                                                                sure to have seen the work of the Yuan-dynasty orchid painter,
                                                                Xuechuang Puming (mid 14th c). By the time Bonpo takes up
                                                                his brush, however, the realism of the Chinese model has been
                                                                abandoned and the painting is more abstract and lyrical, with a
                                                                distinctly Japanese graphic, linear pattern.
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