Artwork Details
45-5/8 x 26 in. (image) 89-1/2 x 35-1/8 in. (mounting without knobs) 91 x 35-1/8 x 1-1/4 in. (installed with knobs) 2 x 35-1/8 in. (rolled)
PeriodSigned: Buncho ga Seal: Bunsei mizunoe uma Buncho ga in
Accession NumberGift of Rosemarie and Leighton Longhi
CopyrightAsian Art (Japanese and Korean)
Color PaletteProvenance
Provenance
Rosemarie and Leighton Longhi, New York; given to the Indianapolis Museum of Art in 2000
Gallery Labels
Gallery Labels
李鉄拐
蝦蟇
Xiama (literally, "toad") was formerly a high-ranking official named Liu Haichan. After meeting a Daoist master, he resigned his post and gave away his property and eventually became a Daoist sage. The three-legged toad on his back could mystically convey him wherever he wished to go.
Li Tieguai, once a proud and vigorous man, could leave his body to travel, as shown here. On one such occasion, however, his followers thought he had actually died and cremated his body. When he returned, he had no choice but to inhabit the body of a beggar who had died by the roadside.
The son of a samurai serving relatives of the shōgun, the artist Tani Bunchō enjoyed both status and influential patronage. He studied every known style of painting of his day, including Kano, Nanga, and even Western-style painting. He also made copies of ancient paintings, like these by the Yuan dynasty artist Yan Hui, owned by the Chion-in, a temple in Kyoto.
Exhibition History
Exhibition History
Exhibition Name
Venue
Dates
Realms of Immortals
Cincinnati Art Museum
October 12, 2013 - January 5, 2014
Japanese Masterworks: Paintings from the Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Museum of Art
June 10, 2005 - July 10, 2005
Japanese Masterworks: Paintings from the Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Museum of Art
April 16, 2005 - May 29, 2005
Japanese Masterworks: Paintings from the Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Museum of Art
February 26, 2005 - April 3, 2005
Japanese Masterworks: Paintings from the Indianapolis Museum of Art
Indianapolis Museum of Art
November 6, 2004 - December 26, 2004
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