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Photo: Eduardo Calderon
Tree Pruner
Photo: Eduardo Calderon

Tree Pruner

Date1920's
Label TextAfter a decades-long infatuation with Western painting aesthetics, Hakô later returned to an approach based on purely Japanese and Chinese styles by the end of the 1920s. In this unassuming piece, the lively atmosphere created by loose, spontaneous brushstrokes recalls Japanese literati painting, while the representation of the pine boughs is suggestive of yamatoe. Hakô believed that the application of light colors and the unassuming quality in this painting convey a sense of openhearted ingenuousness.
Object number2010.41.55
Photo CreditPhoto: Eduardo Calderon
Published ReferencesMorioka, Michiyo; Berry, Paul. "Modern Masters of Kyoto: The Transformation of Japanese Painting Traditions," Seattle, WA: Seattle Art Museum, 1999, p. 237, illus. 67.
Credit LineGift of Griffith and Patricia Way, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum
Dimensions52 3/8 x 17 7/8 in. (133 x 45.4 cm)
MediumInk and light colors on paper
Landscapes of the Four Seasons
late 1890s
Object number: 2010.41.11
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
late 1910s
Object number: 2010.41.61
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
ca. 1923
Object number: 2010.41.44
Three Friends by a  Mountain Stream
1902
Object number: 2010.41.17
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
late 1930s or later
Object number: 2010.41.63
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
early 1930's
Object number: 2010.41.60
ca.1890
Object number: 2010.41.9.1
ca.1890
Object number: 2010.41.9.2
ca.1890
Object number: 2010.41.9.3
Hototogisu in Summer Valley
1884
Object number: 2010.41.10