Artist: Ishii Rinkyō
Date: 1926
Size: 129 x 28 cm
Technique: Silk
This painting pictorializes Peach Blossom Spring, a classical Chinese legend about a fisherman who discovers a hidden utopia where the peach trees are perpetually in bloom. This paradise is said to exist in a remote and secluded valley in Wuling (Japanese: Buryō), far from the chaos of the outside world. The legend derives from the famous prose preface to a poem composed by the Chinese poet Tao Yuanming (365–427). He related the story of a fisherman from Wuling who, while poling his boat upstream along a river he had never before fished, came upon a grove of blossoming peach trees lining both banks and discovered water gushing into the river from a spring in a hillside cave. Passing through the cave, he emerged into an enchanted valley where people had fled from wars during the Qin era (221–207 BCE) and had remained isolated there ever since. Fishing and farming, they led well-fed, happy lives and begged the fisherman not to leave and reveal their secret. After a few days’ stay, however, the fisherman furtively departed, returning to Wuling to report his experience. A search party was organized, but no trace could be found of the grotto.In this idyllic place, people live in harmony with nature, enjoying a simple and contented life free from war and suffering. Rinkyō depicted the cavernous entryway through a mountain as vast and enveloping, with loose, flowing contour lines giving it a sense of dynamic energy. Some of the rocky outcrops were rendered with vibrant colors, adding depth and dimension to the scene. The willow trees growing on the yellow rocks near the cave are lush. On the islands in the distance, the tree branches were dotted with light pink, representing peach blossoms. A small dog can be seen on one of the islands, bent down to drink from a clear stream. The layers of mountains in the background were painted in soft shades of blue and red, adding to the idyllic atmosphere of the painting.Ishii Rinkyō was a Nihonga painter who was initially trained in Western-style oil painting. But he was converted by his encounters with a new generation of Nihonga painters, including his teacher Hashimoto Gahō (1835–1908), and decided to exclusively pursue Nihonga instead. He became known for his innovative approaches to traditional pictorial themes, as demonstrated here.
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