Artwork Page for Landscape of the Four Seasons

Details / Information for Landscape of the Four Seasons

Landscape of the Four Seasons

사계산수도 [四季山水圖]

late 1400s
(Korean, b. c. 1404)
Measurements
Overall: 92.7 x 348.7 cm (36 1/2 x 137 5/16 in.); Painting only: 93 x 57.1 cm (36 5/8 x 22 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

Yi Sumun is believed to have been a Korean man who moved to Japan in 1424 and became an influential landscape painter in Japan.

Description

Yi Sumun is believed to have been a Korean painter who migrated to Japan in 1424 at the age of 20. This pair of screens is the artist’s most important composition in this format. Viewed from right to left, the screens show the passage of the four seasons, a popular theme in medieval Japanese ink painting.
A pair of six-panel folding screens depicts mountainous landscapes stretching continuously across the panels in shades of gray and black against a sand-color background. In the upper screen, ridges of a mountain cut vertically through the center with water on the right. In the lower screen, water winds horizontally across the scene. Both screens are sprinkled with people, roughly outlined with thick, short brushstrokes.

Landscape of the Four Seasons

late 1400s

Yi Sumun

(Korean, b. c. 1404)
Korea, Joseon dynasty (1392–1910)

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