Object

One-Line Calligraphy by Konoe Iehiro

Keio Object Hub
Person
Date
制作年 AD18
Title
コノエイエヒロヒツイチギョウショ
Collections
Depository
Institute of Oriental Classics (Shido Bunko) Campus Mita
Ref. number
AW-CEN-000996-0000
License
CC BY Images license
Creditline

慶應義塾(センチュリー赤尾コレクション)

URL
Classification
Art
AI Tagging
Plant Art Font Symbol Pattern

Konoe Iehiro (1667-1736), a noble who lived toward the middle of the Edo Period, was born to the Regent Konoe Motohiro (1648-1722) and Imperial Princess Tsuneko, the daughter of Emperor GoMizuno-o. His career advanced rapidly to Regent, then Senior Regent, and finally reached the highest bureaucratic post of Prime Minister at age 44. Iehiro retired into Buddhism at age 59 and adopted the religious name Shinkaku and an artistic pen name, Yoraku-In. The Konoe family are descendants of the ancient Fujiwaras and the head of the five families that conventionally held regent and senior regent posts. In calligraphy, the Konoe family originated the Konoe School, also called the Sanmyaku-In School, and produced generations of outstanding calligraphers, including Konoe Nobutada (1565-1614), widely respected as one of the “Three Brushes of the Kanei Era,” Nobuhiro (1599-1649), Hisatsugu (1622-1653) and Motohiro. Under his father Motohiro’s influence, Iehiro was attracted to classical masterpieces of the Heian Period and devoted himself to the collection and trace-copy reproduction of purely Japanese-style brushworks of the ancient court. Despite the popularity of brushwork styles with Chinese influence as well as the Oie School (alias Shoren-In School or Son-en School), Iehiro practiced the classical Japanese style, teaching himself with the treasures that had accumulated in the Konoe household. He contributed to the revival of the ancient style and was respected as the originator of the Yoraku-In School.A powerful rendition of this one-line calligraphy with seven syllables: Feel the intense concentration throughout, from when the brush starts to flow to the way it runs through the letters, to the final impressive ending. It speaks eloquently of the artistic height Iehiro had attained.

月満虚堂下指遅(印)

Rights

Ref. number
AW-CEN-000996-0000
License
CC BY
Creditline

慶應義塾(センチュリー赤尾コレクション)

Images
license

Depository and ID

Depository
Institute of Oriental Classics (Shido Bunko)
Campus Mita
URL
Classification
Art

Components

OPEN DATADESIGN

Details

Identifiers

Title (EN)
One-Line Calligraphy by Konoe Iehiro

Physical description

Weights and quantities
Quantity 1幅

Identifiers

Title (EN)
One-Line Calligraphy by Konoe Iehiro

Physical description

Weights and quantities
Quantity 1幅