Cranes and Tortoises
On View In:
Gallery 251
Artist:   Komai Genki  
Title:   Cranes and Tortoises  
Date:   c. 1780  
Medium:   Ink and colors on paper  
Dimensions:   65 1/2 x 141 7/8 in. (166.37 x 360.36 cm) (image) 72 3/8 x 148 3/4 in. (183.83 x 377.83 cm)  
Credit Line:   The John Cowles Family Fund  
Location:   Gallery 251  

Komai Genki was a pupil of the renowned painter Maruyama Okyo (1733-95), who is credited with having synthesized elements of western naturalism with Japanese traditional decorative design. A brilliant designer and colorist, Genki was responsible for having popularized the Maruyama style in the late nineteenth century, causing it to become the most popular school of painting in Japan's thriving art culture.

For this pair of folding screens, Genki depicted what appears to be a bucolic riverside scene with cranes and tortoises. In actuality, however, it is a time-honored theme that traces its origins back to ancient China where it was believed that a mythical island inhabited by immortal sages existed somewhere off the eastern coast. According to tradition, the island was borne on the back of an ancient tortoise, and cranes--thought to live for thousands of years--nested in the ancient pine trees that grow on the mountain slopes.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Genki, Komai  
Nationality:   Japanese  
Life Dates:   Japanese, Shijō, 1747 - 1797  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Paintings  
Physical Description:   seven cranes, including one baby, with black and white feathers and red heads; pine saplings behind cluster of birds at R and in LLC  
Creation Place:   Asia, Japan, , ,  
Accession #:   2007.42.1  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts