Haboku Landscape, c. 1510 by Sh?getsu T?kan

Haboku Landscape, c. 1510

Sh?getsu T?kan

Fine art poster

More products…
  • 200gsm thick fine art print paper
  • Giclée print quality
  • 100+ year colour guarantee
  • Read more about our art prints
£17.95
Free delivery when you spend over £75 (UK, EU & US)

Order by 16 Dec for UK delivery (see all dates) (15 Dec for framed canvas)

Image information

Close

Sizing information

Dimensions
Overall size (inc frame) x cm ( x in)
Depth cm (in)
Artwork x cm ( x in)
Border (mount) cm top/bottom (in)
cm left/right (in)
The paper size of our wall art shipped from the US is sized to the nearest inch.
Model is 5ft4in or 1.62m
Model is 5'4" (1.62m)

Our prints

We use a 200gsm fine art paper and premium branded inks to create the perfect reproduction.

Our expertise and use of high-quality materials means that our print colours are independently verified to last between 100 and 200 years.

Read more about our fine art prints.

Manufactured in the UK, the US and the EU

All products are created to order in our print factories around the globe, and we are the trusted printing partner of many high profile and respected art galleries and museums.

We are proud to have produced over 1 million prints for hundreds of thousands of customers.

Delivery & returns

We print everything to order so delivery times may vary but all unframed prints are despatched within 1–3 days.

Delivery to the UK, EU & US is free when you spend £75. Otherwise, delivery to the UK costs £5 for an unframed print of any size.

We will happily replace your order if everything isn’t 100% perfect.

Product details Haboku Landscape, c. 1510

Haboku Landscape, c. 1510

Sh?getsu T?kan

Haboku (Flung-ink) Landscape, c. 1510. This vague but energetically rendered landscape highlights the brush: the messenger for a moment?s emotional or spiritual state. The painting represents one of many subjects and styles Shugetsu studied and absorbed from the great practitioners of Ming-dynasty China in the late 1400s and early 1500s. The technique of "flung ink," or haboku, disguises purposeful composition as an almost random, distracted series of brushstrokes. Close inspection reveals tonalities and strokes brushed onto a soft, absorbent paper in a range from heavy and wet to crisp ink charges. Not surprisingly, amateur and professional Zen monk-painters favored this "impressionistic" style as an exercise in seeing meaningful detail slowly emerge from what at first seems unclear.

  • Image ref: 2730511
  • Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Find related images

Haboku Landscape, c. 1510 by Sh?getsu T?kan zoom

Discover more

More by the artist Sh?getsu T?kan.

Explore the collection Heritage Images.

This image on other products