Six Persimmons Explained

Six Persimmons
Artist:Mu Qi
Year:13th Century
Type:Ink on Paper
City:Kyoto, Japan
Museum:Daitoku-ji
Height Metric:36.2 cm
Width Metric:38.1 cm
Height Imperial:14.25 in
Width Imperial:15 in

Six Persimmons is a 13th-century Chinese painting by the monk Muqi Fachang. It was painted during the Song dynasty. Muqi was one of the two great exponents of the spontaneous mode of Chinese painting (the other being Liang Kai). It features six persimmons on an undefined background. It is painted in blue-black ink on paper.[1]

The painting is often cited as an expression of Chan Buddhist ideals.[2] The thick and thin brushstrokes that model the lightest of the persimmons make it seem to float in contrast to the darker one next to it. The treatment of the stems and leaves have been compared to Chinese characters. Professor James Cahill of the University of California Berkeley devoted a lecture to the image.[3]

It is currently in the collection of the Juko'in subtemple of Daitoku-ji in Kyoto, Japan.[1]

Gary Snyder referenced the image in his 2008 poem "Mu Ch'i's Persimmons".[4]

Footnotes

  1. Lee Page 379-380
  2. Book: Jr, Donald S. Lopez . Critical Terms for the Study of Buddhism . 2009-11-15 . University of Chicago Press . 978-0-226-49323-7 . en.
  3. Cahill. James. 12C - Six Persimmons. http://jamescahill.info/a-pure-and-remote-view. YouTube. December 24, 2020.
  4. Snyder . Gary . 2008-10-13 . Mu Ch'I's Persimmons . en-US . The New Yorker . 2023-11-20 . 0028-792X.

References