AP Art History Slide Identification List
Go to Slide Gallery Home Page / Go to Later Japanese Slide Gallery
Go to in class Later Japanese Power Point

Slide #

Later Japanese Art

Later Japanese 1
Dry cascade and pools, upper garden, Saihoji temple, Kyoto, Japan, modified in Muromachi period, 14th century.
Later Japanese 2
Stone and gravel garden, Ryoan-ji, Kyoto,
Japan. C. 1480
Later Japanese 3
TOYO SESSHU, broken-ink landscape, Japan, Muromachi period, 1495. Hanging scroll, ink on paper, 4’ 10 1/4” x 1’ 7/8”. Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo.
Later Japanese 4
KANO MOTONOBU, Zen Patriarch Xiangyen Zhixian Sweeping with a Broom, Japan, Muromachi period, ca. 1513. Hanging scroll, ink and color on paper, 5’ 7 3/8” x 2’ 10 3/4”. Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo.
Later Japanese 5
KANO EITOKU, Chinese Lions, Japan, Momoyama period, late 16th century. Six-panel screen, color, ink, and gold-leaf on paper, 7’ 4” x 14’ 10”. Imperial Household Agency, Tokyo.
Later Japanese 6
KANO EITOKU, Fusuma depicting pine and cranes and plum tree, from the central room of the Juko-in, Daltoku-ji, Kyoto. Momoyama period, c. 1563-73. Ink and gold on paper, height: 5' 9 1/8:.
Later Japanese 7
Himeji Castle, Hyogo, near Osaka. Momoyama period, 1601-1609.
Later Japanese 8
HASEGAWA TOHAKU, Pine Forest, Japan, Momoyama period, late sixteenth century. One of a pair of six-panel screens, ink on paper, 5’ 1 3/8” x 11’ 4”. Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo.
Later Japanese 9
HONAMI KOETSU, Boat Bridge, writing box, Japan, Edo period, early seventeenth century. Lacquered wood with sprinkled gold and inlay, 9 1/2” x 4 5/8”. Tokyo National Museum, Tokyo.
Later Japanese 10
SUZUKI HARUNOBU, Evening Bell at the Clock, from Eight Views of the Parlor series, Japan, Edo period, ca. 1765. Woodblock print, 11 1/4” x 8 1/2”. Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago (Clarence Buckingham Collection).
Later Japanese 11
KATSUSHIKA HOKUSAI, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, from Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji series, Japan, Edo period, ca. 1826–1833. Woodblock print oban, ink and colors on paper, 9 7/8” x 1’ 2 3/4”. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Spaulding Collection).
Later Japanese 12
TANGE KENZO, national indoor Olympic stadiums, Tokyo, Japan, Showa period, 1961–1964.
Later Japanese 13
TSUCHIYA KIMIO, Symptom, 1987. Branches, 13' 1 1/2" x 14' 9 1/8" x 3' 11 1/4". Installation view, Jeune Sculpture '87, Paris 1987