mori-sosetsu-japanese-fl-1818-30-painting-of-a-monkey-under-the-moon
Lot 1126
Mori Sosetsu (Japanese, fl. 1818-30), Painting of a Monkey Under the Moon
Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Edo period (1615-1868), ink and colors on paper, painting features a monkey seated on branch looking up at the moon, signed 祖雪 Sosetsu to lower right corner of the painting together with two red artist's seals, presented in a Japanese style hanging mount with bone rollers.



DOA 74 x 18 in., Image size 37 1/2 x 13 in.

From the Collection of the late Dr. Schuyler Van Rensselaer Cammann (1912-1991), Esteemed Professor Emeritus in the Department of Oriental Studies, University of Pennsylvania

Schuyler Van Rensselaer Cammann was an American scholar renowned for his contributions to the field of art and archaeology of Asia, particularly Southeast Asian and Chinese art. He began his distinguished career at Yale University, where upon graduation he spent two years living in Changsha teaching English and European History. He traveled extensively at this time and developed a great interest and appreciation for Tibetan art. He returned to America to attend graduate school at Harvard, but before proceeding to his PhD, World War II broke out and Dr. Cammann returned to China to serve as a US naval officer. After the war, he completed his doctorate at John Hopkins and then went on to teach for many years at the University of Pennsylvania. He continued to conduct fieldwork expeditions to Asia. Over the length of his career, he received many notable awards and recognition for his scholarly contributions to the field of Asian art and archeology.


Overall good estate condition; some creases, both horizontal and vertical, to painting; some scattered losses to paper; one bone roller is lost.