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Oishi Junkyo

Buddhist Nun Orchid Painting ー大石 順教 “蘭”

Buddhist Nun Orchid Painting ー大石 順教 “蘭”

Item Code: Z159

An orchid accompanied by a poem by the tragic nun Oishi Junkyo enclosed in a fine kiri-wood box.  Ink an light color on paper in a silk borer with red lacquered wooden rollers.  The scroll is 38.5 x 110.5 cm (15 X 43-1/2 inches) and is in excellent condition.

Junkyo’s life is a triumph over tragedy.  Born into a low family, she was sent to a tea house where she became an apprentice Geisha.  In a famous incident, the Tea House owner in a drunken rage murdered 5 of the Geisha, and cut off both of Junkyo’s arms.  She survived.  Becoming then a teller of stories and singer, she one day saw a bird feeding her young, and realized she could paint if she used her mouth to hold the brush.  She enrolled into a studio, and became an accomplished painter in the Nihonga tradition.  She then married and had two children, but later divorced, raising the two children alone.  She became a nun, and opened a counseling/self-help center for the disabled.  This was the war years, and the midst of Japan’s industrial revolution.  Both mishaps in the machinations of industry and battle kept her half-way house filled with people in need.  After the war she established a temple, and continued her philanthropic work.

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