Literati Circles

Her Brush: Japanese Women Artists from the Fong-Johnstone Collection Access Guide

United by a shared appreciation for China’s artistic traditions, intellectuals and art enthusiasts formed literati societies (bunjin). For them, art was a form of social interaction. In their gatherings, they composed poetry, painted together, and inscribed calligraphy for one another.

Literati painting (bunjinga 文人画) prioritized self-expression over technical skill. Following this understanding of the brushstroke as an expression of one’s true self, these artists constructed—and conveyed—their identity and personhood through art.

As in other realms explored in this exhibition, literati circles included women from different social backgrounds. But perhaps more so than any other social context, literati circles were accepting of women participants. Many prominent women artists in Edo and Meiji Japan flourished within these intellectual cliques.

Tokuyama (Ike) Gyokuran 徳山(池)玉瀾
1727–1784
Blossoming Plum
Mid-1700s
Ink on paper
Gift of Drs. John Fong and Colin Johnstone, 2018.208

Tokuyama (Ike) Gyokuran is one of the Three Women of Gion, and perhaps the most famous of them all. This knotted plum, together with bamboo, chrysanthemum, and orchid, make up the Four Gentlemen (shikunshi), all common subjects for literati paintings.

Gyokuran and her husband, the accomplished artist Ike Taiga, were on such equal footing that they would wear one another’s clothes, paint together, and neglect their housekeeping chores (evident in this illustration).

Ban Kōkei 伴蒿蹊 and Mikuma Katen 三熊花顛 , Tokuyama Gyokuran and Ike Taiga in their studio (detail), in Kinsei kijinden, vol. 4 (1790), 8. Public domain, National Diet Library Digital Collections, via Wikimedia Commons.

Various artists
Turtles on New Year’s Morn
About 1894
Ink and color on silk
Gift of Drs. John Fong and Colin Johnstone, 2018.202

This collaborative work (gassaku) was signed by different literati artists during an artistic gathering. Three of them—Atomi Gyokushi (1859–1943), Noguchi Shōhin (1847–1917), and Nakabayashi Seishuku (1829–1912)—are women.

Turtles, and especially the long-tailed minogame, are symbols of longevity. As the sun rises on the New Year, these perky turtles come to celebrate and commemorate the occasion.

These small plates, painted for a literati gathering, were used for sweets to complement the sencha (green leaf tea) ceremony. These abbreviated paintings and poems burst with humor and personality. Their creator, the nun-artist Ōtagaki Rengetsu, was a central figure in Edo literati circles. She also produced other tea ceremony paraphernalia, as exhibited here.

This group of plates is also rare for its impeccable documentation. Their original box bears an inscription of authenticity by Priest Kōen of the Jinkō-in temple, where Rengetsu once lived.

Ema Saikō 江馬細香
1787–1861
The Three Friends of Winter
1857
Ink and light color on paper
Gift of Drs. John Fong and Colin Johnstone, 2018.189

The Three Friends of Winter, namely, pine, plum, and bamboo, are a common subject of literati painting (bunjinga). But here, Ema Saikō creates an unconventional composition. From the crevice of a garden rock, wildly twisting pines intertwine and loop around bamboo and frenzied plum blossoms that jut out in all directions. Immortality Mushrooms (reishi), sprouting in the foreground, allude to the subject of resilience in old age. Saikō painted this only four years before her death.

Attributed to Nonoguchi Ryu-ho 野々口立圃
1595–1669
Haibun and Haiga of Crickets
Mid-1600s
Ink on paper
Gift of Drs. John Fong and Colin Johnstone, 2020.570

These paintings belong to the genre of haiga, an abbreviated and swiftly executed painting, accompanied by an equally brief form of poetry called haikai, or haiku.

Nonoguchi Ryūho was one of the progenitors of the haiga form. Takabatake Shikibu, a poet-painter who exhibited talent at an exceedingly young age, continued producing art well into her 90s. In haiga, text becomes an aesthetic element, offsetting, complementing, and balancing the image.

Black and white headshot photograph of the artist looking straight at the camera. They have a round face, cropped hair, and a birthmark on the left side of their nose.

Okuhara Seiko 奥原晴湖, 1912. Photographer unknown. Source: Patricia Fister, Japanese Women Artists, 1600–1900 (Lawrence, KS: Spencer Museum of Art/Harper & Row, Publishers Inc., 1988), fig. 16.

OKUHARA SEIKO 奥原晴湖 (1837–1913)

The tip of her brush
can wipe away
one thousand armies.

Writer for Postal News, 1875

Okuhara Seiko (born Ikeda Setsu) was born into a high-ranking samurai family from Koga. Arriving in Edo (Tokyo), Seiko almost instantaneously garnered a large following and established a studio, which became a vibrant hub for literati painters, poets, and calligraphers.

Despite an 1872 prohibition of women cropping their hair, Seiko did just that (habitually carrying a “doctor’s note” citing a “medical condition”) and wore male attire. In art as in life, Seiko found a unique artistic identity with bold individual brushwork, which caused a sensation in Edo’s literati circles and beyond.

One of the period’s most influential literati artists, Seiko founded a school and had hundreds of followers belonging to all walks of life—from government officials and geisha to roaming samurai.

NOGUCHI SHŌHIN 野口小蘋 (1847–1917)

Noguchi Shōhin 野口小蘋
1847–1917
Cut Flowers and Pine Bough
late 1800s–early 1900s
Ink and color on silk
Gift of Drs. John Fong and Colin Johnstone, 2018.196.

Good wife, wise mother

Popular aphorism in Meiji-era Japan

Noguchi Shōhin burst onto the literati art scene right at the tail end of Okuhara Seiko’s heyday. She exhibited remarkable talent from an early age and later enjoyed imperial patronage, becoming the first woman artist to be appointed Official Artist of the Imperial Household in 1904.

Shōhin cultivated a public persona as a paragon of womanhood, complying with the “good wife, wise mother” paradigm (ryōsai kenbo), which gained traction at the turn of the century. Like Seiko, Shōhin used the expressive qualities of literati painting as a vehicle of self-expression and identity-construction. But unlike Seiko’s maverick and masculine comportment, Shōhin’s persona leveraged her femininity.

Together, Shōhin and Seiko represent two wildly different visions of what it meant to be a literati artist.

Woodblock print of artist kneeling and turning her head to look to the right of the frame. Her hair is pulled back into a bun. There is a brush pot with two brushes, an inkstone, and a fan on the ground in front of her.
Portrait of Noguchi Shōhin 野口小蘋 in Bunbu kōmeiroku 文武高名録, a compilation of famous people and important literary figures published in 1893. Courtesy Hathi Trust Digital Library, digitized by Google.

Her Brush: Japanese Women Artists from the Fong-Johnstone Collection is organized by the Denver Art Museum and made possible through the generous gift of the John Fong and Colin Johnstone collection. Support is provided by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, the Blakemore Foundation, the donors to the Annual Fund Leadership Campaign, and the residents who support the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD). Promotional support is provided by 5280 Magazine and CBS Colorado.