August 20, 2016 – January
16, 2017
Asian Painting Gallery (Gallery 178)
Asian Painting Gallery (Gallery 178)
For the next six months, MFA visitors can watch and
interact with conservators as the Museum’s Asian Conservation Studio in
partnership with colleagues from the Smithsonian’s Freer Gallery of Art
publicly restores Hanabusa Itchō’s rare masterpiece, Death of Buddha (1713)—one of the most important
Buddhist paintings of its time.
Hanabusa Itchō
(1652–1724), best known for his satiric scenes of everyday life, enlivened the
traditional scene depicting Buddha’s death through his masterful handling of
the individual figures and grieving members of the animal kingdom. The painting
was famous in its own time, attracting travelers to the Zen temple where it was
displayed annually for more than 150 years.
The conservation
treatment is an elaborate process that involves completely dismantling and
reassembling the scroll. The new mounting uses a custom woven reproduction of
the original mounting silk made for the MFA by traditional weavers in Kyoto.
The scroll painting also has elaborate gilt metal fittings carved with mythical
lions, created and signed in the 18th century by the famed metalworker and
close friend of the artist, Yokoya Sōmin. Follow the progress at
#mfaConservation or for an in-depth look at this conservation project, see Conservation in Action.
Above: Hanabusa Itchō, Death of Buddha, 1713. Hanging scroll; ink, color, and gold
on paper. Fenollosa-Weld Collection.
http://www.mfa.org/exhibitions/conservation-in-action-preserving-nirvana
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