Skip to main content
Hawk on an oak tree
Hawk on an oak tree

Hawk on an oak tree

Artist (active mid-1600s)
Place of OriginJapan
Date1624-1658
PeriodEdo period (1615-1868)
MaterialsInk on paper
DimensionsH. 47 1/8 in x W. 21 7/8 in, H. 119.7 cm x W. 55.6 cm (image), H. 82 1/4 x W. 28 3/4 in, H. 208.9 cm x W. 73 cm (overall)
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB60D18
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsPainting
On View
Not on view
MarkingsThree seals
More Information

曾我二直庵筆 柏に鷹図 一幅 紙本墨画 江戸時代 17世紀

Like the bald eagle that is America's national emblem, the Japanese mountain hawk-eagle (kumataka) is a large, fiercelooking bird connected with majesty and power. This formidable hunter uses the element of surprise to attack its prey from perches high in the forest. Japanese warriors admired the hawk's qualities and complemented activities like falconry and bird-collecting by commissioning paintings of both hawks and tethered falcons for display in their castles.

The artist Soga Nichokuan specialized in painting hawks, as did his father Chokuan. His goal, as seen in this work, was to capture the bird's alert posture. Standing with one leg curled under the body, eyes intently focused, the hawk stands ready to spring from its vantage place in an oak tree. Notice the care Nichokuan took to distinguish the different shapes and textures of the bird's soft plumage, sharp beak and talons, glassy eye, and elastic skin—all using graded washes of ink and supple brush lines.

Subject
  • hawk
  • oak
Landscape
Soga Sojo
approx. 1503
Landscape
Soga Shōhaku
Gibbons playing in oak trees, one of a pair
Kaihō Yūshō
approx. 1585-1595
Gibbons playing in oak trees, one of a pair
Kaihō Yūshō
approx. 1585-1595
Hawk Preying on the Bird
Zhang Mu
probably 1660-1680
Hawk
Sekino Jun'ichiro
1956
Fisherman under willow tree
Ike Taiga
1723-1776
Mynah birds in an old tree
Fuso Shuko
Approx. 1400-1450
Hut and pine tree
Otagaki Rengetsu