On View In:
Gallery 253
Artist:   Sho_en Ikeda  
Title:   Cherry-blossom Viewing (Hanami)  
Date:   c. 1910  
Medium:   Ink and colors on silk  
Dimensions:   48 11/16 x 19 3/4 in. (123.67 x 50.17 cm) (image) 80 x 23 11/16 in. (203.2 x 60.17 cm) (overall, without roller)  
Credit Line:   The Louis W. Hill, Jr. Fund  
Location:   Gallery 253  

Ikeda Sho_en's life is emblematic of the expansive spirit and modernity of Meiji period Japanese, especially for those who were well educated and wealthy. Her father was from an elite samurai family. After graduating from Keio University, he attended Rutgers University in the United States in order to study railroad engineering. Her mother, fluent in English, was an accomplished Western-style oil painter. Both parents encouraged Sho_en to pursue her interest in painting. As a talented, fashionable young woman in a traditionally male dominated profession, she attracted considerable attention. When she was twenty-two, she married handsome Ikeda Terukata, also a painter. The two became stars within Tokyo's urbane society. Unfortunately, her brilliant career was cut short by tuberculosis, and she died when she was only thirty-one. She specialized in images of women and their elegant pastimes. Here, she depicts three splendidly dressed young women out for a boat ride to view blossoming cherry trees--perhaps along the Sumida River.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Ikeda, Sho_en  
Nationality:   Japanese  
Life Dates:   1888 - 1917  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Inscription and Seal LLC, in black: two-character inscription LLC, in red: seal  
Classification:   Paintings  
Physical Description:   three women in brightly-patterned kimonos seated in a boat; woman at R holds a partially folded fan under her chin  
Creation Place:   Asia, Japan, , ,  
Accession #:   2005.35  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts