Ryozo Kato (b. 1964)
This Lot has been sourced from overseas. When au… Read more
Ryozo Kato (b. 1964)

Landscape

Details
Ryozo Kato (b. 1964)
Landscape
Signed and titled in Chinese characters (on the reverse)
ink and pigment on paper mounted on wooden board
90 x 72.5 cm. (35 3/8 x 28 1/2 in.)
Painted in 2008
Special Notice
This Lot has been sourced from overseas. When auctioned, such property will remain under “bond” with the applicable import customs duties and taxes being deferred unless and until the property is brought into free circulation in the PRC. Prospective buyers are reminded that after paying for such lots in full and cleared funds, if they wish to import the lots into the PRC, they will be responsible for and will have to pay the applicable import customs duties and taxes. The rates of import customs duty and tax are based on the value of the goods and the relevant customs regulations and classifications in force at the time of import.

Lot Essay

The tradition of landscape painting, developed simultaneously across numerous generations and countries by independent invention, reveals various perspectives and spiritual and emotional inspiration. Ryozo Kato is fascinated by the Chinese ink landscape painting tradition of the Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127), in which scenes in scrolled formats are rendered with finely executed strokes categorised as fuhekishun (axe-cut stroke) and himashun (fibre texture stroke). Ryozo Kato applies comparable characteristics in painting his landscapes, drawing the eye vertically through the foliage or horizontally through the mountain ranges, inviting the viewer to visually tread along the meandering path. By employing delicate brushwork over a softly colour-washed paper, Kato forms a romantic vision of dense foliage that seemingly provides shelter for the hermetic literati scholars who similarly practised this style of painting.

Kato depicted the glorious morning landscape by using the soft yellowish-brown pigment. The dramatic scenery reminiscent of those 17th Century Baroque Masters's poetic delineation. Though unexplored wilderness may present unexpected encounters with animals and strangers, Kato's paintings negate fears and tribulations of the extreme wild and instead invite the viewer into his calm and meditative surroundings.

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