Shigajiku
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Shigajiku ( ja, 詩画軸, "poem-and-painting scrolls"), are a form of Japanese
ink wash painting Ink wash painting ( zh, t=水墨畫, s=水墨画, p=shuǐmòhuà; ja, 水墨画, translit=suiboku-ga or ja, 墨絵, translit=sumi-e; ko, 수묵화, translit=sumukhwa) is a type of Chinese ink brush painting which uses black ink, such as tha ...
. These hanging scrolls depict poetic inscriptions at the top of the scroll and a painted image, usually a landscape scene, below. Buddhist monks of the ''gozan'' 五山 or Five Mountain monasteries of the early
Muromachi Period The is a division of Japanese history running from approximately 1336 to 1573. The period marks the governance of the Muromachi or Ashikaga shogunate (''Muromachi bakufu'' or ''Ashikaga bakufu''), which was officially established in 1338 by t ...
(1336-1573) first introduced the poem-and-painting scrolls. ''Shigajiku'' is a modern category given to the visual and literary culture of the Muromachi Period rooted in the Zen tradition. The most common visual aesthetic for ''shigajiku'' is a monochrome water and ink style of painting, '' suibokuga'' 水墨画, with only occasional traces of color throughout the scroll.


History

The first poem-and-painting scrolls came to Japan with the return of the first Zen monks who had been studying in China. The most important cultural precedent to ''shigajiku'' was the Chinese version of the poem/scroll, the ''shijiku'' 詩軸. This continental version served as a model for the future poem-and-painting scrolls produced by the Japanese Five Mountains monks. Yet, ''shigajiku'' are distinct from their Chinese predecessors because of the distinctive hanging scroll format and the number of inscriptions on the scrolls themselves. The creation of ''shigajiku'' is closely tied to the secular and religious lives of the Five Mountains monks. The formation of ''tatuchū'', or sub-temples, provides the basis for the social relationships through which the ''shigajiku'' would be created and circulated. The ''tatuchū'' created a new social unit among Japanese Zen monks and gave rise to the ''shikai'' or poetry meetings. These communities and meetings provide an important social base for the monks of the Five Mountain monasteries. Clerics intermingled with each other and exchanged scrolls with other monks during such gatherings. These monks would then compose and write poems on each other's scrolls, thus accounting for some scrolls having between four and thirty inscriptions. The first surviving shigajiku, ''Newly Risen Moon over a Brushwood Gate'', was produced in the Five Mountains Zen monasteries during 1400. Of the eighteen inscriptions, six are connected to Nanzen-ji, the temple and literary epicenter for Zen monks during the early 15th century. This connection highlights the importance of the social relationships of the clerics and the spiritual value of the painting.


Genre Categories of Shigajiku

The subjects of poem-and-painting scrolls vary to include subjects such as: portrait scrolls, ''
chinsō Chinsō ( ja, 頂相 ; alternatively pronounced ''Chinzō'' ) are commemorative portraits of Zen masters, a traditional form of East Asian art, specifically Zen art. They can be painted or sculpted and usually present a Zen master ceremonially dr ...
;'' scrolls on Daoist and Buddhist subjects, ''dōshaku senki''; and landscape scrolls, ''sansui''. Most ''shigajiku'' are the last category landscape of which there are many different representations. The different themes of the landscape genre will be focused on here as they appear most frequently in ''shigajiku''.


Themes within the landscape genre

* ''Zen kōan'' – riddles posed by a Zen master designed to teach/enlighten pupils * ''Sōbetsuzu'' – farewell pictures * ''Kaiyūzu'' – commemorative paintings * ''Shiizu'' – painting themes taken from poetry (usually Chinese poetry) * ''Shosaizu'' – a scholar's study in mountain setting The most common theme of landscape is the image of a secluded scholar's study in a mountain setting or ''shosaizu''. Monks of the ''tatuchū'' communities popularized the idea of creating idealizing, memorializing, and pining images of the scholar's study to escape the confines of a private subtemple. These poem-and painting scrolls depict idealized retreats into nature with open skies, vast waters, and hazy mountain views – a perfect setting for the intellectual pleasures of retired monks living out their secluded lives. These scholar's studies were seen as blissful escapes from busy city life where peace was difficult to find. Key features include rocks, cliffs, flowing water, a bridge, a mountain path, an elderly scholar climbing, vast expanses of water and sky with mountains soaring in the distance. To say these scholar's study poem-and-painting scrolls were only escapist would be incorrect. A scholar's study ''shigajiku'' aids in evoking an idealized landscape to help the monk bring about a sense of peaceful serenity through which they would write, meditate, reflect, etc. Painters manipulated their surroundings and were forced to use their imagination or memory to create these landscapes that were so far removed from their own setting of a bustling Japanese city. Often looking to the deep mountains valleys one would find in China – these tiny idealists landscapes became a monks’ flight from reality via Chinese inspiration. For these Japanese monks, “incorporating Chinese poetic themes with idealized visions of Chinese landscapes expressed faithful spirituality in a way that simply painting a realistic landscape from their own mundane life could never have done… painted poetry became the image of utopia in the minds of Japanese and Korean elites, whether or not those images looked like the ‘real’ China.”


Characteristics of Landscape Shigajiku Poem and Painting Scrolls


Paintings

The painting of landscape ''shigajiku'' encompasses different themes, but almost always includes an idealized landscape representing some imaginary corner of nature. This affords a perfect setting for the intellectual pleasures of the monks’ retired and secluded lives. Ancient crooked pine trees clinging tenaciously to a sheer cliff, hills in the distance, vast expanse of water and sky, this secluded corner of nature would have been beloved by Zen monks and their followers and are some of the most common tropes of ''shigajiku''. Historically there were two ways to create the painting of the ''shigajiku'': the “old style” and the “new style.” The “old style” is believed to have derived from the painting traditions of the
Northern Sung The Song dynasty (; ; 960–1279) was an Dynasties in Chinese history, imperial dynasty of China that began in 960 and lasted until 1279. The dynasty was founded by Emperor Taizu of Song following his usurpation of the throne of the Later Zhou. ...
painters, specifically
Guo Xi Guo Xi () ( 1020 – c. 1090)Barnhart: Page 372. Guo Xi's style name was Chunfu (淳夫) was a Chinese landscape painter from Henan ProvinceCi hai: Page 452 who lived during the Northern Song dynasty. One text entitled "The Lofty Message of Fo ...
(1020-1090), where the aesthetic concentrated around balanced and centered compositions. The “new style” is believed to be largely derived from the
Southern Sung The Song dynasty (; ; 960–1279) was an imperial dynasty of China that began in 960 and lasted until 1279. The dynasty was founded by Emperor Taizu of Song following his usurpation of the throne of the Later Zhou. The Song conquered the rest ...
, specifically Xia Gui (1195–1224), with the central focus of the composition moved into a corner of the scroll to create a dynamic and asymmetrical image. It is important to note that both of these painting styles originated in China and became the way in which Japanese Zen monks desired to paint their ''shigajiku''. ''Reading in a Bamboo Grove'' encompasses the most common tropes of the ''shigajiku'', the imposing mountains, with sheer cliffs, trees precariously perched near edges, and hints of a vast open horizon. This scholar's study ''shigajiku'' is done in the “new style,” and when compared with a composition by Xia Gui, the characteristics of the “new style” become clearer. The positioning of the mountain scene in the corner and the poetic inscriptions above and opposite the image dramatically accentuates the asymmetrical nature of the scroll.


Inscriptions

Five Mountains monks used the ''shikai'' or poetry gatherings to discuss, create, and inscribe their poetry onto the scrolls of their fellow monks. The poetic inscription extends no further than 2/3 of the scroll leaving the bottom 1/3 for the painted image. This structuring has led some scholars to argue that the poetry is valued more than painting. The Zen priests inscribing ''shigajiku'' were not as concerned with who painted the picture as they were with how successful the painting was in transporting the viewer into an idealistic natural setting. The poetic inscriptions vary in subject matter, referring to the natural poetry of the early century, celebrated works of Chinese poetry, or messages to other monks of greeting, farewell, congratulation, etc. The number of inscriptions varies, but the order in which they were inscribed denotes the prestige of a monk. Active in 16th century, Shūtoku created a ''shigajiku'' entitled ''Early Spring Landscape''. The format of a tall and narrow poem filling one corner and the “new” style of painting filling the opposite corner creates an asymmetry that is characteristic of ''shigajiku''. The asymmetry of the composition and the poetic inscription at the top recalls
Shūbun The traditional Chinese lunisolar calendar divides a year into 24 solar terms. ''Qiūfēn'', ''Shūbun'', ''Chubun'', or ''Thu phân'' is the 16th solar term. It begins when the Sun reaches the celestial longitude of 180° and ends when it rea ...
, and the painting also reflects the influence of Sesshū. The text on the lower right of ''Early Spring Landscape'', authored by Yōkoku Kentō (d. 1533), translates to:
''Though the west lake swells with water as spring arrives, / the emerald bamboo outdoors blocks the sight of boats. / Had the east wind facilitated his quest, / he would have returned by boat in moonlight to the frosted land of Wu faraway.''
The text on the upper left, authored by Teihō Shōchū (fl. ca. 1538), translates to:
''Floating in a boathouse on the brimming spring river, / what could one desire in a sound sleep after mooring? / In nothing but insouciant boating would I spend the rest of my life, / with mountains along the white gull-dotted stream as my beauties.''
The poetry of these two different monks, both evoke ideas reflected in the painting below it. The natural images of flowing water, trees, and wind are incredibly calming. The musings of sleep and dreams demonstrates the monks longing to be in such a serene place. The solitude yet tranquil atmosphere of the landscape provides the perfect escape for the monks who were writing and discussing the poems in busy city of Koyto. The ''shigajiku'' medium enables the mind to reach that level of contemplation where the world disappears and all one hears is nature – a state greatly desired by these city dwelling monks.


One Composition Interpretation

Poem-and-painting scrolls must be understood as a whole piece of art – the meaning of the image is informed by the inscription and vice versa. The unity of the ''shigajiku'' scroll is “painting of a poetic idea.” Understanding the two parts of the ''shigajiku'' together is vital. Scholar Shimao Arata articulates that together, the painting and inscriptions of ''shigajiku'', form the “four perfections” – poetry, painting, calligraphy, and prose. These “four perfections” express “the mind’s level of spiritual accomplishment, and this spiritual link between the four perfections is itself the subject of the earliest known poem-and-painting scrolls.” While the idea of poetry and painting influencing and changing the overall meaning of a composition preexisted the creation of ''shigajiku'' – it has become a concept fundamental to ascertain the meaning of a shigajiku. The first ''shigajiku'', ''Newly Risen Moon over a Brushwood Gate,'' follows “the classic formulation of the relation between poetry and painting developed by Su Shih and his circle, which we have seen also was a crucial factor in the rise of the earliest Japanese poem-and-painting scrolls around.” Poem-and-painting scrolls were intended, from the beginning of their production, to be understood as a whole piece of art with different mediums (“four perfections”) used to convey a single artwork. ''Landscape'' This scroll was once thought to be an early example of a ''shigajiku'' depicting the genre of a landscape and the theme of a scholar’s study. More recently, it has been recognized as a work of the Edo period. The inscriptions are quotations from essays on Sima Guang (1019-1086) by the Chinese Song-dynasty literatus Su Shi (1037-1101) One interpretation of the quotations' use above this painted image is that the scholar's studio depicted is “surrounded with bamboo as a metaphor for the garden of Sima, the Song dynasty scholar-official who, in imitation of the Tang poet Bai Juyi, enjoyed the garden in isolation during his exile in Luoyang.” In this interpretation, the connection between the quotation and the painting is clear – the painting informs the selected inscription and the inscription informs the painting. ''Hue of Water, Light on the Peaks'' The scholarly retreat depicted on the scroll shows and idyllic and peaceful setting surrounded by nature. The poem is named by the first characters of the first poem, ''suishoku rankō'', a phrase that can be literally translated as “hue of the water, light on the peaks.” Again this connection highlights the importance of “reading” the composition as one piece of art, instead of multiple pieces of art painting, poetry, and calligraphy. The dynamism of the ink painting can be seen through the “arrangement of various elements in this work lacks concision and a sense of three-dimensional space in its execution.” The scholar’s study in the center of the painting is offset by the commanding motif of the three pine trees and looming mountain in the background. This structural ambiguity can be seen as an attempt to render a scholars retreat that is truly separate from reality, “this painting is an excellent example of the art produced within the cultural sphere of Zen Buddhism, which shunned the worldly realm.” ''Splashed Ink Landscape'' With the dedicatory inscription at the top of the scroll written by Sesshū himself, Sesshū’s scroll slowly reveals itself to the reader. The “unconsummated, intuited nature of the ''Splashed Ink Landscape'' has led many commentators to interpret Sesshu's painting as embodying or pictorializing the principles of Zen Buddhism.” The unrestrained nature of this work speaks to the enlightened ideal of the Zen tradition, while maintaining the tropes of the suggested mountains, surrounding water, and trees.


See also

*
Buddhist art in Japan Buddhism played an important role in the development of Japanese art between the 6th and the 16th centuries. Buddhist art and Buddhist religious thought came to Japan from China through Korea. Buddhist art was encouraged by Crown Prince Shōtoku i ...
* National Treasure (Japan) *
Japanese poetry Japanese poetry is poetry typical of Japan, or written, spoken, or chanted in the Japanese language, which includes Old Japanese, Early Middle Japanese, Late Middle Japanese, and Modern Japanese, as well as poetry in Japan which was written in t ...


References

{{Reflist Painting techniques Japanese painting Zenga