Art News

Smithsonian’s Sackler Gallery premieres works by Japanese master painter ~ Kano Kazunobu

artwork: Kano Kazunobu (1816-63) - "Supernatural Powers, Five Hundred Arhats: Scroll 57" - Japan, Edo Period, ca. 1854-63. Hanging scroll; ink and color on silk. Photo: Collection: Zōjōji, Tokyo, Japan. - Courtesy of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery


WASHINGTON, DC.- In early 1854, just as American Commodore Matthew Perry’s ships steamed into Edo Bay to persuade Japan to open its ports to the world, the esteemed painter Kano Kazunobu (1816–63) received a commission from a highly respected Buddhist temple located in the heart of Edo, now modern-day Tokyo. His mission was to create 100 paintings on a wildly popular theme of the day—the lives and deeds of the Buddha’s 500 disciples, known in Japan as rakan. For the first time in the U.S., Kazunobu’s graphic and flamboyantly imagined depictions of the daily lives and wondrous deeds of the Buddha’s legendary disciples are on view in “Masters of Mercy: Buddha’s Amazing Disciples” at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, March 10th through July 8th.

The exhibition features 56 paintings from Kazunobu’s epic series, created between 1854 and 1863 for the Pure Land Buddhist temple of Zōjōji. Little-known and never before displayed outside Japan, the series was on view for the first time to the modern general public in a widely hailed exhibition held at the Edo-Tokyo Museum in the spring of 2011.

At the time of the commission, Kazunobu was a mature and important painter working in one of the richest artistic environments of any era in Japan, among several generations of artists of remarkable sophistication and accomplishment. For his larger-than-life subjects, he created huge paintings measuring 4 feet by 10 feet fully mounted. Designed in pairs, each pair features 10 disciples—500 in all—captured in a sensational and daring “tabloid” style. 

The Sackler exhibition will also include 19 rare and important paintings of the same subject matter from the Freer collection—all prototypes for and known by the artist as he developed his own masterwork. Woodblock prints, books and other documents created by Kazunobu’s contemporaries, including Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) and Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797–1861), will provide the viewer with a sense of Edo period ambiance and influences on Kazunobu’s unconventional presentations.

artwork: The Japanese artist Kano Kazunobu (born 1816) labored to produce one hundred paintings depicting the miraculous interventions and superhuman activities of the five hundred disciples of the Buddha.

artwork: Kano Kazunobu - The Bath. Five Hundred Arhats: Scroll 9.- Japan, Edo Period, ca.1854‐63. Hanging scroll; ink and color on silk. -  Photo: Collection: Zōjōji, Tokyo, Japan.“Kazunobu jumped on the bandwagon of the most popular cult of the Edo period—the cult of the rakan or disciples of the Buddha,” said James Ulak, senior curator of Japanese art. “From the late 1700s on, many temples commissioned paintings and sculpture on the subject, often creating outdoor dioramas to accommodate the tremendous public interest in these remarkable characters. In short, Kazunobu’s series is simply the best of them all.”

The disciples he depicted, according to Buddhist scripture, were followers of the historical Buddha’s teachings, enlightened in mass and traditionally represented by the number 500. “Their charm and broad popular appeal derived from their dual personalities,” said Ulak. “The disciples were much like ordinary mortals, yet they possessed supernatural powers, revealed in times of need and exercised for the good of humanity, not unlike today’s modern superheroes.”

Kazunobu presents the disciples engaged in fantastic acts of compassion: traversing the cosmos to rescue the suffering from the calamities of earthquake, flood and fire, juxtaposed with humbler, human moments revealed in intimate detail—bathing, shaving, burying the dead and caring for animals. His flamboyant style reflects Edo Japan’s broader interest in theatrical presentation, including a popular taste for the high drama of kabuki theater. Depictions of catastrophe and miraculous rescues seem fantastic but also document the times in which he worked—the ensemble was created during a decade of marked political upheaval coinciding with an unusual number of natural disasters.

“Masters of Mercy” is a highlight of “Japan Spring on the National Mall,” a celebration of three major exhibitions of masterworks by distinguished Edo-period artists hosted by the Freer and Sackler galleries and the National Gallery of Art in honor of the Cherry Blossom Centennial.

Also on view in the nation’s capital this spring is “Hokusai: 36 Views of Mount Fuji,” March 24–June 17 at the Sackler and “Colorful Realm: Japanese Bird-and-Flower Paintings by Itō Jakuchū (1716–1800),” at the National Gallery of Art.

Each exhibition features not only a retrospective of a distinctive and important painter and designer of the 18th and 19th centuries, but also specific thematic ensembles of works, many never seen outside Japan, created by Kazunobu, Hokusai and Jakuchū over periods as long as a decade. All three exhibitions are free of charge and accessible on the National Mall between 12th and Seventh streets. Visit : http://www.asia.si.edu/