NAGASAWA ROSETSU (1754-1799)
NAGASAWA ROSETSU (1754-1799)

Drinking Festival of the Eight Immortals

Details
NAGASAWA ROSETSU (1754-1799)
Drinking Festival of the Eight Immortals
Signed Rosetsu sha, sealed Nagasawa and Gyo
Hanging scroll; ink and slight color on paper
50 ¼ x 23 in. (127.6 x 58.4 cm.)
Provenance
Viscount Naito Family
Literature
Tokyo Bijutsu Club, Naito shishakuke uritate (Catalogue of collection of the Viscoun Naito family) (Tokyo: Tokyo Bijutsu Club, 1918), no. 52

Brought to you by

Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

Lot Essay

Rosetsu, along with Soga Shohaku and Ito Jakuchu, was at the cutting edge of his times. The three were known as the "Three Eccentrics,” which meant painting in a highly individualistic manner, but was also related to character. Rosetsu, for example, was known as something of an argumentative hothead and his behavior and excessive drinking are part of the background that adds to the enjoyment of his pictures.
The son of a low-ranking samurai, he decided early on to study with Maruyama Okyo in Kyoto, but soon opened his own studio, discarded his teacher’s careful realism, and went on to become a pioneer of modernist expressionism. He died on an outing to Osaka at the age of only forty-six—some say an envious rival put poison in his boxed lunch. Others tell of him slitting his throat due to financial troubles. What is certain is that he was unusually confident and relished novelty, with a streak of vulgarity. He was quick-witted, versatile and had exceptional technical skill.

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