schema:description 9 | "id: 159733" |
schema:description | "wall_description: Okyo was the most influential painter and teacher of his time in Kyoto. His mastery of brush and ink found expression in a variety of Chinese and Japanese subjects, painting styles, and formats. This depiction of a heron on a willow branch is done in a classical Japanese painting (<em>yamato-e</em>) style, utilizing flat areas of colorful pigments set against an expansive background with little or no spatial depth....(more)" |
schema:description | "culture: Japan, Edo period (1615-1868)" |
schema:description | "measurements: Image: 69.4 x 185 cm (27 5/16 x 72 13/16 in.)" |
schema:description | "tombstone: Heron on a Willow Branch, late 1700s. Maruyama Okyo (Japanese, 1733-1795). Two-panel folding screen; ink, color, lacquer, and gold on silk; image: 69.4 x 185 cm (27 5/16 x 72 13/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Mrs. A. Dean Perry 1997.108...(more)" |
schema:description | "technique: Two-panel folding screen; ink, color, lacquer, and gold on silk" |
schema:description | "collection: ASIAN - Folding screen" |
schema:description | "creditline: Bequest of Mrs. A. Dean Perry" |
schema:description | "type: Painting" |