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Auspicious Peony Kakejiku Hanging Scroll

Description

This work by Kidoguchi Yoshio portrays peonies in magnificent full bloom, the generous petals unfolding with a sense of opulence across the scroll, accompanied by a tender bud hovering on the cusp of opening. Set against a luminous ground of genuine Kanazawa gold leaf and understated oxidized silver, the composition emerges with radiant dimensionality, balancing both fullness and anticipation within a single moment. Layers of color and light glide across each petal, revealing delicate transitions that shimmer with refined brilliance and drawing the viewer into its textured surface. Long revered in Japan as the “king of flowers,” the peony embodies prosperity and auspiciousness, here expressed through a poised grandeur that elevates the surrounding space with an air of timeless elegance.

Executed in a kenpon (silk) mounting, the flowers rise gently from the surface through a carefully applied technique known as haku-moriage (raised gold-leaf work). This controlled three-dimensionality lends the blooms a sculptural presence, while preserving the flexibility required of a hanging scroll—ensuring that its form endures through repeated rolling and unrolling. The result is a delicate balance between physical depth and resilience, shaped through Kidoguchi’s continued exploration of material and form.

Across the petals and leaves, nuanced gradations emerge through the layered use of gold leaf, aluminum leaf, and colored foil. By varying the size and placement of each fragment, Kidoguchi modulates both chromatic intensity and luminosity, allowing color and light to shift in tandem. What emerges is a space where volume and radiance coexist, each surface responding subtly to changing light.

The composition is framed by leaves in softly shifting greens, while the background holds the blooms in a quiet, atmospheric space. Together, these elements do not compete, but rather draw the eye inevitably back to the flowers themselves.

Graceful yet grounded, this hanging scroll reflects Kidoguchi’s enduring dialogue with gold leaf: not as ornament, but as a means of revealing depth, light, and the resonance of form.

About Artist