Published on EthnicNewz (http://www.ethnicnewz.org)
Asian Art: Bird & Flower Painting
By Mary
Created 2008-06-10 23:00

2008-06-11 00:00
2008-06-22 00:00
Unkoku Totetsu, "Birds, Trees, and Flowers," Japanese, Edo period, 17th century. One of a pair of six-panel screens: ink and color on gold-leafed paper. William Sturgis Bigelow Collection.
 In the monumental seventeenth-century folding screen Birds and Flowers,

peonies suggest the early summer.


 The Brilliance of Bird-and-Flower Painting: 

Gems of Asian Art

Until Sunday, June 22, 2008 

WHERE:

Museum of Fine Arts Boston

465 Huntington Avenue

Boston, Mass. 02115-5597

INFORMATION: 617-267-9300  or   www.mfa.org

 

Throughout Asia birds and flowers have been cherished for their beauty, but they have carried rich symbolic messages as well. 


For example, the lotus—a delicate bloom born of the muck of a pond—was adopted early in India as a Buddhist metaphor for the beauty of the soul that can emerge from the mire of human existence. 

In China, Korea, and Japan, mandarin ducks have been emblems of marital fidelity, while hawks serve as symbols of military prowess. 
 
Paintings of native Japanese birds and flowers have been appreciated primarily for their evocation of the seasons and the traditional poetic emotions associated with them. 

This exhibition, drawn from the Museum's collections, explores the distinctive visual language of bird-and-flower painting that has facilitated dialogue across Asia between man and nature.  

 


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