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27
ArtistJapanese, 1685–1768

Hotei on a Boat

18th century
Hanging scroll; ink on paper
Overall: 13 3/16 × 20 9/16 in. (33.5 × 52.2 cm)
EX.2023.NW.051

“Hotei rides a boat to go out moon viewing”1

 

The convention of traveling monks crossing rivers has a long history in Zen and Zen painting, which Hakuin references in this work, though the painter does not show Hotei undertaking a pilgrimage. Instead, Hakuin shows him engaged in idle travel on a pleasant boat ride to view the moon. As with other works, Hakuin’s style of calligraphy could perhaps lend itself to a different reading, which implies that Hotei, while out viewing the moon, has somehow transcended his current place and time. Indeed, the placement of Hotei’s sack, silhouetting the jolly monk, makes it appear as though Hotei is on a celestial plane.

 

—Bradley Bailey

Notes

1 Stephen Addiss and Audrey Yoshiko Seo, The Sound of One Hand: Paintings and Calligraphy by Zen Master Hakuin (Boulder: Shambhala, 2010), 209.