%C2%A9 Suemura Sh%C5%8Dbun
Bamboo (madake), lacquerexpand_more
The John R. Van Derlip Fund; purchase from the collection of Elizabeth and Willard Clarkexpand_more 2013.31.169
This fruit basket, handwoven from strips of lacquered bamboo, takes the shape of an open folding fan. The artist used a type of bamboo known as madake (literally, “true bamboo”), the most common form of bamboo, long prized in East Asia for its strength and flexibility. The intricate weave and embellished form are characteristic of karamono, or “Chinese-style,” basketry, a style rooted in traditional Chinese bamboo-work, examples of which were in Japan since ancient times.
Suemura Shōbun was born in Osaka, where he became the only apprentice of Yamamoto Chikuryūsai I (1868–1950). When his teacher died, Suemura became an independent artist until he was drafted to work in a factory during World War II (1939¬–45). In 1951, his work was accepted to the Japan Fine Arts Exhibition (Nitten), the first of thirty-six such exhibitions in which he showed work. This basket was submitted to the Nitten exhibition held in 1957.
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© Suemura Shōbun