Portrait of Reiko Sitting
| Support Type: | Canvas |
| Paint Type: | Oil Paint |
| Current Location: | Pola Museum of Art |
This is one of the painting's of Reiko, who is Kishida Ryusei's daughter. He has painted her in a very familiar style to his other paintings of her. Here, Reiko, sits against a flat, near-black ground, dressed in a vivid red kimono patterned with yellow blocks of color and dark motifs, bound with a red obi. Her hair falls in the familiar bob as his other paintings, and her face is solemn with narrowed eyes turned slightly down and away, the lips closed and still. There is no smile here, no warmth offered to the viewer; she seems pre-occupied in her own thoughts. She rests one small hand flat on a greenish cushioned surface, and a single red apple sits beside it. The fabric of the kimono is rendered with dense, tactile realism, every fold and dyed pattern carefully worked, while the face and that undersized hand are quietly distorted. The dark, airless background isolates her completely, pushing the bright red of the kimono forward and giving the picture an almost solemn gravity. The apple does quiet double work: it is a real, glossy object the painter clearly relished, but a lone fruit set beside a watchful child also lends the scene the stillness of a small still life, an undertone of ripeness and passing time. The overall effect is tender and faintly unsettling at once — a child rendered with great care yet made to look oddly ancient and self-contained, sitting motionless in a shadowed space with her apple. It is a portrait that turns an ordinary little girl into something grave, watchful, and quietly mysterious.
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