Shiko Munakata 'Ume-no-saku (ume blossoms)' from Ban-da-fu (floral variations) Wind God, from the series of Kegon-fu (the Pantheon of the Gandavyuha Sutra) Honshin-no-saku, from the series of Kannon-kyo (the Avalokitesvara Sutra) A visit at night, from a series of ‘Utou (Birds of Sorrow)’ June, Urin-no-saku, from a series of Nature through the Twelve Months A Series of Daizou-kyo (The Tipitaka) Furimuki-no-saku (Looking back), from a series of Women, Merciful Avalokitesvaras Flower Hunting ‘Kyo-mo-ari O-ho-ke-na-ku-mo’ (nothing exists in and of itself, without dependencies), from a series of Kokoro-uta (Poems from the Heart) ‘Michi (the Way)’