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Topic: Kano Masanobu


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In the News (Tue 22 Dec 09)

  
  Kano Masanobu (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab2.cs.virginia.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The Kano school was a teaching of painting that maintained dominance over 400 years until the Muromachi period, Meiji.
Masanobu was influenced by the priest-painter Tensho Shubun, and some sources indicate that he may have received the bulk of his artistic education under Shubun.
Kano Masanobu served the Muromachi government as an official painter, succeeding Sōtan to thee post, which was called goyō eshi (誤用絵師) in Japanese.
www.cooldictionary.com.cob-web.org:8888 /words/Kano-Masanobu.wikipedia   (173 words)

  
 Kano - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Kano Masanobu, c.1434-c.1530, the forerunner of the school, was attached to the shogun Yoshimasa's court.
Kano Eitoku, 1543-90, grandson of Motonobu, painted screens with landscapes and figures and decorated the interiors of the royal palaces.
Kano Tanyu, 1602-74, first known as Morinobu, was the grandson of Eitoku and was called the reviver of the Kano school.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-kano-fam.html   (440 words)

  
 Kano Eitoku - Search Results - ninemsn Encarta
Born into the Kano dynasty of painters, Eitoku was trained in the...
The most important school of painting in the Momoyama period was that of the Kano, and the greatest innovation of the period was the formula,...
The founder of the family was Masanobu Kano (1453-1490), who based his style on that of Chinese ink painting, which relied on monochromatic ink...
au.encarta.msn.com /Kano_Eitoku.html   (104 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Kano, family or school of Japanese painters (Asian And Middle Eastern Art, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Kano Masanobu, c.1434–c.1530, the forerunner of the school, was attached to the shogun Yoshimasa's court.
Kano Eitoku, 1543–90, grandson of Motonobu, painted screens with landscapes and figures and decorated the interiors of the royal palaces.
Kano Tanyu, 1602–74, first known as Morinobu, was the grandson of Eitoku and was called the reviver of the Kano school.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/K/Kano-fam.html   (448 words)

  
 Kano school - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It was founded by Kanō Masanobu (1434-1530), a contemporary of Sesshu and student of Shubun.
Some scholars write that though Masanobu mastered elements of Chinese painting and of Shubun's style, he was overall mediocre and lacked the originality and creativity of his teacher.
Nevertheless, Masanobu became an official painter in the Shogun's court, and it was this lofty position which granted the Kanō school influence and fame.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Kano_school   (373 words)

  
 Kano [Japan] Art Style Information at Buy Art
Kano is another of the traditional Japanese styles of painting, founded by the painter Kano Masanobu [1434-1530].
Masanobu was best known for his portraits and depiction of human figures and he managed to give a distinctly Japanese touch to the prevalent style of the Sung Dynasty, which had shown very heavy Chinese influences at the time of the classically Chinese technique of ink and paper drawings.
Masanobu was then followed by his son, Kano Motonubo, who defined the Kano style with brash, lyrical, sweeping brushstrokes and very cleanly executed compositions.
www.buy-original-art.com /styles/kano_japan.htm   (461 words)

  
 Tyler Museum of Art - News
The Kano school's beginnings can be traced back to Kano Masanobu (1434–1530) who was active in the second half of the Muromachi period (1392–1573).
Masanobu's success as a painter owed much to making Chinese-style ink painting more appealing to the ruling samurai (military) class in Japan.
The school was firmly established by Masanobu's son Motonobu (1476–1559), who further adapted Chinese traditions of painting to the Japanese taste.
www.tylermuseum.org /press_Japanese.htm   (1020 words)

  
 Japanese Painting
Kano Masanobu (1453-1490) and his son Kano Motonobu (1476-1559) established the Kano painting school.
The Kano school used bright colors and introduced daring compositions with large flat areas that later should dominate the ukiyo-e designs.
The shijo school was a split in the 18th century from the official Kano school.
www.artelino.com /articles/japanese-painting.asp   (1133 words)

  
 JAANUS / Kanouha 狩野派
The founder of the school, Kanou Masanobu 狩野正信 (1434-1530), was a painter of samurai 侍 origin and succeeded Oguri Soutan 小栗宗湛 (1413-81) as an official painter (*goyou-eshi 御用絵師) to the Muromachi shogunate.
In ink-painting, in particular, he invented an original style employing light colors and simple compositions, which became very popular among the military government at that time.
Kanou Motonobu 狩野元信 (1476-1559), Masanobu's son, further strengthened the school by expanding his social and political connections to the upper strata of Muromachi society.
www.aisf.or.jp /~jaanus/deta/k/kanouha.htm   (1038 words)

  
 ブリタニカ・ジャパン - Encyclopædia Britannica A-Z Browse
(1890s), the best-known native history of the Hausa people, the Kano kingdom was founded as one of the Hausa Bakwai ("Seven True Hausa States") in 999 by Bagauda, a grandson of Bayajida (Abuyazidu), the legendary progenitor of...
It was traditionally founded by Kano, a flsmith of the Gaya tribe who in ancient times came to Dalla Hill in the locality in search of iron.
It was formed in 1968 from Kano province, and in 1991 its northeastern portion was split off to form Jigawa state.
www.britannica.co.jp /azbrowse/k/k8.html   (1925 words)

  
 Hatsuboku (Splashed Ink) Landscape by Kano Tsunenobu
Kanô Masanobu (1434-1530), the founder of the tradition that now bears his name, was the first secular painter appointed head of the shogun's official academy.
With the patronage of the shoguns, who governed Japan from 1185 to 1868, and a highly organized workshop and apprenticeship system, Masanobu and many successive generations of Kanô artists effectively monopolized official shogunal and imperial commissions for three hundred years.
Kanô Tsunenobu, the painter of this hatsuboku (splashed ink) landscape and a direct descendent of Kanô Masanobu, rose to head the Kobikichô branch of the Kanô school in the early 1700s and became the court painter in attendance at the Imperial household in Kyoto in 1704.
www.dartmouth.edu /~arth17/HatsubokuK.html   (325 words)

  
 Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for Kano   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Kano KANO [Kano], family or school of Japanese painters.
It is the administrative and commercial center for an agricultural region that specializes in peanut growing and goat raising.
A major road connects Maradi with Kano, Nigeria.
www.encyclopedia.com /articles/06822.html   (647 words)

  
 The Kano School of Painting | Special Topics Page | Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
World Map, 1600-1800 A.D. East Asia Map, 1600-1800 A.D. The Kano school of painting was founded by Kano Masanobu (1434–1530), and its greatest influence was during the
Kano artists combined a Chinese academic style of ink painting with decorative elements and the use of polychrome derived from
Official artists to the Tokugawa shogunate during the Edo period, Kano masters dominated Japanese painting from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century.
www.metmuseum.org /TOAH/hd/kano/hd_kano.htm   (134 words)

  
 Kano, - Current local time in Kano Nigeria - Nigeria   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Kano Analysis and Customer Needs: Just got through reading Gene’s post, Kano Taxonomy of Customer Needs and another post he refers to on the topic.
Kano Technologies is a leading hardware manufacturer of advance storage technologies including external SATA, desktop raid and enterprise backup.
Kano, Free download only track available, 'We Have a Problem ' is an EXCLUSIVE download only track, available for a limited time only.
theinfopointer.com /?q=kano   (417 words)

  
 Ernest Fenollosa
He also adopted the name Kanō Yeitan Masanobu, suggesting that he had been admitted into the ancient Japanese art academy of the Kanō.
Among Fenollosa's accomplishments were the first inventory of Japan's national treasures, and in so doing he discovered ancient Chinese scrolls brought to Japan by traveling Zen monks centuries earlier.
New York: A. Knopf, 1917; East and West: The Discovery of American and Other Poems New York: T.Y. Crowell, 1893; The Masters of Ukioye: a Complete Historical Description of Japanese Paintings and Color Prints of the Genre School.
www.dictionaryofarthistorians.org /fenollosae.htm   (834 words)

  
 Plum, Pine and Bamboo: Seasonal and Spiritual Paths in Japanese Art
Hanging scrolls with pictures or calligraphy or both in a vertical format, suspended from a wooden rod.
The school of painting founded by Kano Masanobu (1434 - 1530), its greatest influence was during the Momoyama (1573 - 1615) and Edo (1615 - 1868) periods.
Kano artists combined a Chinese academic style of ink painting with decorative elements and the use of bright colors derived from Japanese native painting (yamato-e).
www.ackland.org /art/exhibitions/japanart/glossary.htm   (701 words)

  
 artnet.com: Resource Library: Kano: (1) Kano Masanobu   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sotan lived at the Shokokuji, a Zen temple in Kyoto patronized by the Ashikaga family, and the earliest record of Masanobu’s activity as an artist—the execution of a lost series of screen-and-wall paintings (shohekiga) for a subtemple of the Shokokuji in 1463—is found in the Inryoken nichiroku, the official journal kept by the monks there.
During the Onin Wars (1466–77), Masanobu fled the devastation in Kyoto for Nara.
After Sotan’s death in 1481, Masanobu’s name began to appear frequently in the Inryoken nichiroku, particularly in connection with commissions by the shogun Ashikaga Yoshimasa (1436–90) and the Shokokuji, but it is not clear whether Masanobu inherited Sotan’s post of painter-in-residence.
www.artnet.com /library/04/0457/T045703.asp   (261 words)

  
 Samurai Sworsd of Japan - Notable Samurai Warriors in History -3
In addition, he produced an anthology of his own poetry called the Kamo-no-Chomei-shu.
Eitoku was the son of Kano Shôei (1514-1562) and carried on the Kano school of painting as established by Kano Masanobu (1434-1530).
Eitoku was likely tutored at a young age by his talented grandfather Motonobu (1476-1559), who introduced him to shôgun Ashikaga Yoshiteru in 1552.
japanesesamuraiswords.com /samurai-swords-japan-3.htm   (294 words)

  
 Phospholipase Cbeta 4 is specifically involved in climbing fiber synapse elimination in the developing cerebellum -- ...
Phospholipase Cbeta 4 is specifically involved in climbing fiber synapse elimination in the developing cerebellum -- Kano et al.
Articles by Kano, M. Articles by Wu, D. Articles citing this Article
T. Ichise, M. Kano, K. Hashimoto, D. Yanagihara, K. Nakao, R. Shigemoto, M. Katsuki, and A. Aiba
www.pnas.org /cgi/content/abstract/95/26/15724   (1036 words)

  
 Shosenin (Kano Masanobu) on artnet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Find works of art, auction results & sale prices of artist Shosenin (Kano Masanobu) at galleries and auctions worldwide.
Find unknown or rarely seen works by important artists
sample: Here are the top 1 of 1 past sale results for Shosenin (Kano Masanobu):
www.artnet.com /artist/724685/shosenin-kano-masanobu.html   (136 words)

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