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Image Not Available for Old Pine
Old Pine
Image Not Available for Old Pine

Old Pine

Date1925
Maker Tsuji Kako Japanese, 1870 - 1931
Label TextAlmost certainly, the crane is the most auspicious motif in Japanese art, as well as the most ubiquitous. Since ancient times, cranes have been depicted on every kind of East Asian artistic medium as symbols of good fortune. In this pair of hanging scrolls, the artist has joined a pair of red-crowned cranes-connoting a long and harmonious marriage-with an ancient, gnarled pine. This felicitous and highly decorative coupling signifies the fervent wish for happiness and longevity.
Object number2010.41.99.1
Credit LineGift of Griffith and Patricia Way, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum
DimensionsImage: 50 3/8 x 16 9/16 in. (128 x 42 cm) Overall: 86 5/8 x 24 5/8 in. (220 x 62.5 cm)
MediumInk and colors on beige toned silk.
Tsuji Kako
late 19th - early 20th century
Object number: 2010.41.96
Tsuji Kako
Object number: 2010.41.99.2
Green Waves
Tsuji Kako
ca.1910
Object number: 2010.41.32
Nakakuni Delivering an Imperial Request
Tsuji Kako
ca. 1901
Object number: 2010.41.28
Photo: Eduardo Calderon
Tsuji Kako
1907-8
Object number: 2010.41.37
Gathering of Chinese Women
Tsuji Kako
ca.1902
Object number: 2010.41.31
Hazy Moon through Pine Tree
Tsuji Kako
ca.1913
Object number: 2010.41.24