| Support Type: | Silk |
| Paint Type: | Ink |
| Current Location: | Kimbell Art Museum |
| Location History: | Created in Japan around 1780 during the Edo period, the hanging scroll was originally patronized by the cultivated upper strata of society in Kyoto. It later entered the private market in Tokyo, where it was held by the prominent art dealership Kochukyo Co., Ltd. In 1981, the Kimbell Art Foundation purchased the painting from Tokyo, and it has since resided in the permanent collection of the Kimbell Art Museum in Fort Worth, Texas. |
Born into a wealthy farming family in the Settsu province in 1716, Yosa Buson navigated a nomadic early life before establishing his reputation as a towering intellectual figure of the Edo period. Rejecting the rigid, decorative aesthetics of the prevailing native ukiyo-e traditions, Buson chose to immerse himself in the deeply literary world of nanga (Southern school painting) or bunjinga (literati painting). He was driven by an intense preoccupation with classical Chinese culture, poetry, and landscapes, which he masterfully synthesized into a localized Japanese aesthetic. Crucially, his contributions were not limited to a single discipline; he was equally revered as one of history's greatest haiku masters alongside Matsuo Bashō. His unique genius lay in his ability to dissolve the boundaries between the visual and the textual, elevating the haiga genre—where image and verse intertwine—into a highly expressive and autonomous form of high art before his passing in Kyoto in 1783. Completed around 1780, "Landscape with a Solitary Traveler" perfectly epitomizes Buson's mature period and his command over subtle, monochromatic ink-and-wash techniques. Working with ink and light washes of color on a delicate silk hanging scroll, Buson avoids heavy outlines, opting instead for a technique of textured, layered brushstrokes to build the formidable weight of a large boulder on the left and winding mountain paths on the right. To evoke the physical sensation of a biting, frigid atmosphere, he employs a restrained palette of pale greens and muted grays, leaving the gnarled trees entirely leafless. The painting structurally channels a specific line from a Tang dynasty poem by Han Yu: "A single path in cold mountains through the myriad streams." Buson masterfully translates this literary rhythm into visual suspense, placing a tiny traveler in a green cloak crossing a precarious footbridge over a rushing, swollen mountain stream, directly drawing the viewer's eye into the immense, silent solitude of nature.
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