Details
OTAGAKI RENGETSU (JAPAN, 1791-1875)
A lotus shaped water vessel
The water vessel is covered in a beige crackle-suffused glaze, lightening to a mushroom hue in the interior and stopping above the foot. The exterior of the bowl is inscribed with a poem:
Ikutsura ka Lines
yukue mo miezu in the twilight mist
yugasumi where they go I cannot see
netakumo gan no I envy the wild geese
koe bakari shite only their voices trailing behind
5 ½ in. (14 cm.) wide
With inscribed wood box
Brought to you by

Lot Essay

Box inscriptions:
Box lid inscribed: Kensui by Rengetsu
Label on box lid: Kensui by Rengetsu

Inside of the lid inscribed:
Rengetsu ni tedukuri. Hasugata Kensui (A handmade kensui of lotus form by the nun Rengetsu)

Ikutsura ka yukuemomiezu yugasumi nemukumoganno koebakarikana (Lines in the twilight mist where they go I cannot see I envy the wild geese only their voices trailing behind)

Showa Kanoe Haru. Rakuhoku jinkoin Kanten (Showa 15th year (1940) spring. At the quiet store of Jinkoin temple in Rakuhoku, Kyoto)

Otagaki Rengetsu (1791-1875) was a Buddhist nun, poet, calligrapher, potter and painter. Shortly after her birth in Kyoto to a samurai family with the surname Todo, she was adopted by Otagaki Mitsuhisa who worked at Chion'in, an important Jodo (Pure Land) sect temple in Kyoto, and was given the name Nobu. In 1798, having lost her mother and brother, she was sent to serve as a lady-in-waiting at Kameoka Castle in Tanba, where she studied poetry, calligraphy and martial arts, returning home at the age of 16 to marry a young samurai named Mochihisa. They had three children, all of whom died shortly after birth; in 1815 Mochihisa also died. In 1819 Nobu remarried, but her second husband died in 1823. After enduring the loss of two husbands and all her children, aged only 33 years old, she shaved her head and became a nun, at which time she adopted the name Rengetsu (Lotus Moon). Throughout her lifetime she produced delicate hand-built tea utensils inscribed with poetry and paintings with poems written in beautiful calligraphy, sometimes created jointly with fellow literati artists and writers. In 1875 Rengetsu died in the simple Jinkoin tearoom in Kyoto where she had lived and worked for ten years.

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