Title
Back-to-Back
Description
Two individual plates printed horizontally as a single composition on one sheet; ed. of approx. 20; no individivual ed. numbers assigned to impressions
Date
1973
Title
Backyard Olympics, Chicago
Description
null
Date
circa 1965
Title
The Ball Room, also titled Center Stage
Description
Published as the 1968 gift to the members of the Print and Drawing Club of the Art Institute of Chicago; printed by the artist and Deli Sacilotto, New York
Date
1968
Title
Standing White Heron at Dusk
Description
null
Date
1910 - 1915
Title
Standing Woman with Stringed Instrument
Description
null
Date
n.d.
Title
Still-life with Asparagus and Lemon
Description
null
Date
1957
Title
Still Life with Figs and Other Fruits
Description
null
Date
1962
Title
Storage Jar (Tsubo)
Description
null
Date
14th - 15th century
Title
Sudden Shower over Shin-Ôhashi Bridge and Atake (Ôhashi Atake no yûdachi), from the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo (Meisho Edo hyakkei)
Description
null
Date
1857
Title
A Suitor
Description
One of a pair with 1996.86. Lion design in clothing symbolizes the bodhisattva Monju (Manjusri).
Date
probably 1830 - 1844
Title
Sumita-tsutsumi sekishō (Sumida Embankment Sunset)
Description
Two figures under cherry tree in bloom. A pedestrian talks to the courtesan on the river shore; some men play in the back. In the far background is the Mt Fuji. Left side.
Date
1871, 11th month
Title
Summer: Kataoka Gadō II as Fukuoka Mitsugi in the play Ise Ondo Koi no Netaba
Description
null
Date
1848
Title
Sun Rise Enso
Description
Folding fan with calligraphic inscription of a poem following a circular 'enso' symbol. After the enso symbol, the inscription reads:
The sun rises, lighting up heaven and earth (The sun rises, illuminating the cosmos) (hi idete kenkon kagayaku)
This text is the first couplet of a poem. The second couplet, which is not on the fan reads:
The clouds are swept away, and the mountains are blue (kumo osamarite sangaku aoshi)
These words were spoken by the Zen abbot Daito Koushi (Shuho Myocho, 1282-1338) from the poem written by the Zen Monk Hakuin Ekaku (1686-1768) titled Dream Words from the Land of Dreams (Kaian Kokugo). The poem's meaning is centered on how enlightenment allowd the world to become one of light.
Date
1920
Title
Sunset at Seta
Description
null
Date
circa mid- 19th century
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