Plum blossoms, symbolic of the arrival of spring, were a favored subject among scholar-gentleman painters in china, but when chinese ink paintings of plums arrived in japan their imagery became widespread within zen circles. This composition of a gnarled plum tree framed by a circle of ink wash may reflect the use of the circle in zen painting and calligraphy as a visual representation of words from the text of the heart sutra, “form is void and void is form,” and as a symbol of enlightenment. Motsurin, a zen artist-monk, might also have chosen plum blossoms because they were beloved of his mentor ikkyū sōjun (1394–1481), an abbot of daitokuji temple in kyoto known for his poetry, calligraphy, and flagrantly unorthodox behavior. Motsurin’s inscribed text claims that even elegant peonies and sweet jasmine cannot match the plum as a representation of the spring season. Paintings. Object Type: Japan, Hanging scroll, . Date: 15th century. Place of creation: Japan. Dimensions: Image: 10 3/4 × 16 11/16 in. (27.3 × 42.4 cm). Medium: ink on paper. Collection: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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