Currently not on view

Carp

Itō Jakuchū 伊藤若冲 (painter), 1716–1800
Tangai 丹崖 (inscriber), 1693–1764
Japanese
Edo period, 1603–1868
2020-378

Information

Title
Carp
Maker
Medium
Hanging scroll; ink on paper
Dimensions
Painting: 99.5 × 28 cm (39 3/16 × 11 in.)
Credit Line
Gift from the Gitter-Yelen Collection and Museum purchase, Carl Otto von Kienbusch Jr. Memorial Collection Fund
Object Number
2020-378
Place Made

Asia, Japan

Signatures
Signed: 丹崖道人題 Tangai dōjin dai (Inscribed by Tangai)
Inscription
Inscribed: Inscription by Musen Jōzen (1693–1764) “Wandering far, he does not swallow the fisherman’s bait. Plunging deep, why should he leap into the sage’s boat? In hiding he grows horns, becomes a dragon, and departs, Sending down timely rain to succor man from drought.” - Translated by Stephen D. Allee
Marks/Labels/Seals
Seals: 藤汝鈞印 Tō Jokin-in; 若冲居士 Jackuchu koji
Description

This painting is one of several that carry an inscription by Musen Jōzen and a painting by Ito Jakuchu. The two men evidently were long-time collaborators. Jōzen’s inscription on this painting alludes to an ancient Chinese myth that if a carp could successful jump over the Yellow River’s Longmen Falls it will be transformed into a dragon.

A close examination of the carp painting reveals one of Jakuchu’s major painterly innovations, the artist’s masterly handling of the smoky gray wash. Here it is used to depict the fish’s scales. Jakuchu first experimented with this technique in the 1760s and he used it throughout his career. The effect was achieved by allowing the ink to sink into the paper in a controlled manner that created a faint gray outline to form between individual brushstrokes. Other typical Jakuchu techniques are the claw-like brushstrokes used to depict the waves that swirl around the body of the fish.

Ito Jakuchu was one of the most important 18th century painters in the so-called Eccentric school. His works are much sought after and this would be the first authentic example of his oeuvre in the collection.

Culture
Subject

1989–2020 Gitter-Yelen Collection (New Orleans, LA), by gift and sold to the Princeton University art Museum, 2020.