Dragon and Tiger

Description

In Chinese cosmology, dragons produce rain clouds. The dragon disappearing into and reemerging from clouds in this painting seems to generate rough waves in the water below, pulling it toward the sky. The shape of the foreground wave is indirectly sampled from a painting by 13th-century Chinese painter Yujian, a handscroll once owned by the Ashikaga military rulers of Japan. Sesson must have known the famous painting though copies, and made a copy of his own. Here, the wave reinforces the powerful quality of the dragon.

Provenance

H. Mitsui; C. Satomi.; (Howard Hollis and Co., Cleveland, OH, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?-1959); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1959-present (1959-)

Dragon and Tiger

Sesson Shūkei

c. 1546–56

Accession Number

1959.136.1

Medium

One of a pair of six-panel folding screens; ink on paper

Dimensions

Painting: 157.3 x 339 cm (61 15/16 x 133 7/16 in.); Framed: 172.3 x 354 cm (67 13/16 x 139 3/8 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund