Traditional Japan ink painting of a tree on a decorative background

Vintage Japanese Hanging Scroll — Plum Blossom in Haboku Ink — "Few Petals, Infinite Sky" — Signed Usō — Zen Sumi-e Art

$230.00
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Traditional Japan ink painting of a tree on a decorative background

Vintage Japanese Hanging Scroll — Plum Blossom in Haboku Ink — "Few Petals, Infinite Sky" — Signed Usō — Zen Sumi-e Art

$230.00

This vintage Japanese kakemono (掛け物) presents one of the most beloved subjects in Japanese 
ink painting: the winter plum (梅, ume) - painted in the haboku (破墨) "broken ink" tradition 
with bold, unhesitating brushwork and a Zen inscription that transforms a branch of flowers 
into a meditation on infinity.

The inscription reads: 數點梅花 心天地
"A few points of plum blossom - the heart holds heaven and earth."

This is not a quote from a single poem but a standalone Zen phrase (禅語, zengo) in the 
tradition of bunjinga (文人画) - literati painting - where calligraphy and image become 
inseparable. The few brush-strokes of blossoms are the argument; the inscription is the conclusion.

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𝗨𝗠𝗘: 𝗝𝗔𝗣𝗔𝗡'𝗦 𝗙𝗜𝗥𝗦𝗧 𝗙𝗟𝗢𝗪𝗘𝗥

The plum blossom (梅, ume) holds a cultural depth in Japan that the West often attributes only 
to the cherry blossom. In the Man'yōshū (万葉集, 759 CE) - Japan's oldest poetry anthology - 
ume is mentioned over 100 times, more than sakura. It blooms in late winter, while snow still 
falls, making it the symbol of perseverance, resilience, and beauty that arrives before its time.

For Zen practitioners and literati painters alike, the plum represents the capacity to flourish 
in adversity - the first flash of enlightenment in the long winter of practice.

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𝗧𝗘𝗖𝗛𝗡𝗜𝗤𝗨𝗘 & 𝗔𝗥𝗧𝗜𝗦𝗧

The painter employed haboku (破墨) - a technique where wet, heavily loaded ink is applied 
in rapid, decisive strokes that bleed and bloom into the washi paper, creating the dramatic 
dark mass of the aged plum trunk. Against this weight, the blossoms are rendered in enkaku 
(円郭) - quick circular outlines suggesting petals, with a few strokes indicating stamens -
the maximum expression achieved with minimum means.

The composition follows the classical diagonal structure of Japanese baimei-ga (梅花画): 
the massive trunk sweeping from lower left across the horizontal format, with younger 
branches extending toward open space - a structure refined across centuries by the Kanō 
and Maruyama-Shijō schools.

The artist signed with the brush name 羽草豊 (Usō Yutaka) - "Rich in Feathered Grass" - 
a bunjin-style literary pseudonym. The signature is accompanied by two red seals: 
a rectangular kishōin above the text and a square name seal below the signature.

Estimated period: mid-to-late Shōwa era (c. 1950s–1970s).

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𝗙𝗢𝗥𝗠𝗔𝗧 & 𝗠𝗢𝗨𝗡𝗧𝗜𝗡𝗚

This scroll is in the unusual and collector-prized yokomono (横物) horizontal format - 
wider than tall - which makes it exceptionally versatile in Western interiors: ideal above 
a mantelpiece, console table, bed headboard, or along a hallway.

Mounting: hon-hyōgu (本表具) in blue-grey brocade with gold bamboo and gourd motif borders - 
a Kyoto-style mounting combination that gives the white-ground ink painting an elegant, 
restrained frame. The fūtai (風帯) hanging ribbons are intact.

Condition: Good to very good. Minor age toning to washi consistent with period. 
Ink vivid and unfaded. Mounting intact.
Dimensions: [TO BE ADDED]

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𝗛𝗢𝗪 𝗧𝗢 𝗗𝗜𝗦𝗣𝗟𝗔𝗬

Hang from the integrated cord on any wall. The horizontal format allows display in spaces 
where a vertical scroll would be too narrow. No frame required. For collectors: store rolled 
in an acid-free tube when not displayed.

Dimensions

Height: 108 cm (42.5 inches) Width: 75 cm (29.5 inches)

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