Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Kano Sansetsu


  
  Motoaki Kono - Kano Sansetsu and the design of horses
Kano Sansetsu, the most famous artist of our Age, has found it regrettable that the memory of this typologic classification of the horses is lost.
Sansetsu, as we have already said, was greatly influenced by his stepfather Sanraku but the use of the symbolic representation (monkey, dragon, and Buddhist swastica) is not verifiable in Sanraku, and, therefore, it constitutes an interesting peculiarity of Sansetsu personality.
Sansetsu has painted the V Section of the First Scroll, with a scene of battle in which the representation of some racing horses is full of the dynamic force typical of his art.
www.fondazione-delbianco.org /accademici/MKono_GB.htm   (0 words)

  
  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Kano school   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Kano Eitoku (1543-1590) was a Japanese painter and founder of the Kano school[?] of Japanese-style painting[?] during the Azuchi-Momoyama period of Japanese history.
Born in Kyoto, Eitoku's grandfather Kano Motonobu[?] was an official painter for the Ashikaga Shogunate.
Kano Motonobu (1476-1559) is regarded as the founder of the school.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Kano-school   (281 words)

  
 NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Kano Motonobu   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Kano Motonobu's father was Kanō Masanobu, the founder of the Kanō school.
Kano Masanobu, c.1434–c.1530, the forerunner of the school, was attached to the shogun Yoshimasa's court.
Kano Tanyu, 1602–74, first known as Morinobu, was the grandson of Eitoku and was called the reviver of the Kano school.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Kano-Motonobu   (174 words)

  
 Kano school   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Kano school (狩野派 Kanō-ha) is a school of professional artists in Japan.
Kano Masanobu (1434 - 1530) - the founder
Kano Sansetsu (1589 - 1651) - the leader of Kyogano, Kano school in Kyoto
www.casimiro.com /wiki/en/wikipedia/k/ka/kano_school.html   (57 words)

  
 The Kano School of Painting | Thematic Essay | Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
By expanding the repertoire of the Kano artists to include boldly rendered brushwork and bright colors, Masanobu's son Kano Motonobu (1476–1559) widened the school's appeal and devised a style that merged the ink and brushwork emphasized in Chinese paintings with the decorativeness, color, and pattern associated with
Kano Sanraku (1559–1635), one of Eitoku's adopted sons, in his turn added a greater sense of elegance and decorativeness to Eitoku's style, capturing current interest in sophistication and sumptuousness.
The Kano school style was transmitted even more widely by artists who were trained by Kano painters but not officially connected with family studios, and by rival artists imitating their style to suit patrons' demands.
www.metmuseum.org /toah/hd/kano/hd_kano.htm   (0 words)

  
 History of Sennyuji Temple
The ceiling is decorated with a painting of a dragon by Kano Tan'yu.
The image of Avalokitesvara in the white garment on the wall of the Ura-do was also painted by Kano Tan'yu.
The ceiling is decorated with a painting of a dragon by Kano Sansetsu, which is widely known as "a roaring dragon."
www.mitera.org /HTML/ENGLISH/INTROE~1.HTM   (0 words)

  
 Attributed to Kano Sansetsu / Untitled / Edo period (1615-1868), ca. 1645
Sansetsu was a pupil and son-in-law of Kano Sanraku (1559-1635), an artist who enjoyed the generous patronage of monks at Myoshin-ji.
Sansetsu must have received the monks' continued support after the death of his father-in-law.
The Tensho-in was constructed in 1647, the year in which Sansetsu was granted the honorary title of 'hokkyo.' He was then fifty-eight years old, and these screens reveal the eccentric and abstract tendencies that characterize his later works.
www.davidrumsey.com /amico/amico656364-104691.html   (601 words)

  
 Kano Sansetsu [1589-1651] - Find, Price & Research on Artfact.com
Aliases: Chiga Shin; Dasokuken; Heishirô; Hikosaburô; Jasokuken; Kanō Heishirō; Kanō Mitsuie; Kanō Sansetsu; Kanō Senga; Mitsuiye; Nuinosuke; Sansetsu; Senga Sansetsu; Senga Hata; Shôhaku Sanjin; Shōhakusanjin; Tôgenshi; Tōgenshi
Pupil and adopted son of (8) Kano Sanraku.
After the early death of Sanraku’s eldest son, Kano Shuri Mitsunori, Sanraku adopted Sansetsu and designated him his successor as head of the Kyo Kano studio (see KANO SCHOOL, §3).
www.artfact.com /features/viewArtist.cfm?aID=43619   (412 words)

  
 Landscape Cat. 2
Shiko is said to have been trained in the Kano tradition, that of the school officially recognized by the samurai class, as well as in the Rinpa tradition, whose style epitomized the decorative beauty of painting and crafts in Kyoto.
The style of these two paintings by Shiko is closely tied to the Kano tradition, which the Kyoto artists who appeared after him in the second half of the eighteenth century found burdensome and restrictive of their individual artistic visions and expressions.
In addition, Shikô inherits from the Kano a wide vocubulary of brushwork, including "axe-cut" texture markings to define the sharp, hard forms of boulders such as that in the second panel of the right screen, as well as rapidly dabbed dots to define foliage.
www.aamdocents.org /AAM/Special/05_12Kyoto/KCat2.htm   (1404 words)

  
 Kano - Old Master Artist
Kano (family), family of Japanese painters that originated in the 15th century and persisted until the 19th century.
The giant of the family was Eitoku (1543-90), whose grandiose, highly colored panels and screens set a new standard of power and sumptuousness, although he was also capable of painting in the subdued, expressive ink style of his forebears.
In 1621 the Kano family split into two branches, one in Kyôto, the other in Tokyo, or Edo; principal representatives were Sanraku (1559-1635), Tanyu (1602-47), Naonobu (1607-50), Sansetsu (1590-1651), and Tsunenobu (1636-1713).
www.latifm.com /artists/Kano.html   (291 words)

  
 Kano Sansetsu -
Sansetsu was raised by the colony of Kano artists in Kyoto, and later adopted by the master Kano Sanraku, whose daughter he also married.
He was leader of the Kano school from 1635 to his death.
By using it you agree to the terms of service, including jurisdiction and limitation of liability provisions.
famous.adoption.com /famous/kano-sansetsu.html   (209 words)

  
 AH 375 (Phillips)
Kano Sansetsu, Birds on Plum Trees, Fusuma, Kyoto: Myoshin-ji, Tenkyu-in
Kano Sansetsu, Waterfowl on a Wintry Shore, Left screen, pair 6-fold screens, 154 x 360 cm, Private Collection
Kano Tan'yu, Aichi, Nagoya Castle Fusuma, Exemplary Conduct of the Ancient Chinese Emperors, 1633, Left panel, fusuma; ink, color/paper, 191.5 x 140.5 cm, Aichi: Nagoya Castle
www.wisc.edu /arth/ah375/06.html   (292 words)

  
 The Japan Society of the UK   (Site not responding. Last check: )
First, however, we attend to Sansetsu's workshop practice itself, and try to imagine the role of master and the uses to which he put his assistants, who included his son and disciple Eino (1631-97).
Sansetsu was a scholar of painting: he compiled Honcho gashi (The Painting of this Realm), completed by his son and pupil Eino.
Kano Eino (1631-97), Chogonka zusho, 5 vols, 1677.
www.japansociety.org.uk /lectures/07mccausland.html   (5884 words)

  
 Screening the Japanese Aesthetic - Arts & Entertainment>>Art   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Kano School, which had a tight grip on the artistic tastes of Japanese court and religious life from the 16th century to the end of the imperial system in the 20th century, had no tolerance for artists who ventured outside its standards.
The most noteworthy aspect of the exhibit is not how the Kano artists envisioned their worlds, but how two sets of screens—one from the Minneapolis Institute of Art and one at the Met—are reunited for the first time after four centuries.
Painted by the famous Kano Sansetsu, both were placed back to back at the Tensho-in temple in Kyoto during the early 17th century.
www.columbiaspectator.com /media/storage/paper865/news/2005/01/25/ArtsEntertainmentart/Screening.The.Japanese.Aesthetic-2032271.shtml?norewrite200610290151&sourcedomain=www.columbiaspectator.com   (870 words)

  
 residence kano   (Site not responding. Last check: )
een tochtje maken met de waterfiets of kano of aan de aangename bar die op palen...
In Serravalle (34 km) kan je watersporten beoefenen (kano varen, rafting,...
Città di Kano: informazioni, indirizzi e riferimenti sulla ospitalita e i servizi per Kano...
www.papagaillot.it /pigiama%2Bbambino/amd%2Bk6/residence+kano.asp   (550 words)

  
 Kano school
Kano en buitensport bedrijf dat wild water kanovakanties in Europa organiseert voor zowel beginners als gevorderden.
De NKB is een overkoepelende organisatie voor alle kano en kajak disciplines en geeft het blad "KanoSport" uit.
Kano centrum De Biesbosch maakt vele modellen kano's en kajaks van sterk polyester en carbon/kevlar.
www.omniknow.com /common/wiki.php?in=en&term=Kano_school   (984 words)

  
 Mitsuo Kano ( - ) Artwork Images, Exhibitions, Reviews
Hiroshige, Kano, pl. 54 from a facsimile edition of Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Highway (Kisokaido rokujukyu tsui), 20th century
Kano, 1476-1559 Scene from the Dijian tushuo (Teikan zusetsu): The Chinese Emperor Xuanzong and Yang
Kano Suenobu - Kakemono: The Monkeys (one of pair) n.d.
www.world-arts-resources.com /masters/k/kano-mitsuo.html   (551 words)

  
 Consulate General of Japan in New York   (Site not responding. Last check: )
A monumental fourteenth century scroll depicting the Buddha's Nirvana is displayed in accord with Buddhist commemorations of this event on February 15.
Kano Sansetsu's magnificent "Old Plum" on gold-leafed sliding panels graces the shoin room, and Korin's "Iris by an Eight-Plank Bridge" on screens is scheduled to appear in May. Stunning Negoro lacquers from the collection of Florence and Herbert Irving present a counterpoint of striking form and red color.
The screens "Garden Stream in Changing Seasons," once vaunted as the "supreme example of Japanese impressionism," join Taiga's animated vision of Chinese spring festivities in "The Literary Gathering at the Orchid Pavilion," lent by Mary Griggs Burke, in a selection of works inspired by Chinese and Japanese poetry.
www.cgj.org /en/c/vol_08-6/title_04.html   (480 words)

  
 Kano Sansetsu Artworks and Fine Art at arthistorynet.com
Kano Sansetsu, 1589-1651 Laotzu Guided by Kwanin to His Home Screens Japanese Edo period, 17th
Kano Sansetsu, 1589-1651 Seiwoho Waiting on King Bokuwo Screens Japanese Edo period, 17th century Japan
Kano Sansetsu, 1589-1651 Snowscape Screens Japanese Momoyama period, 17th century Japan One of a pair
www.absolutearts.com /masters/k/kano_sansetsu.html   (0 words)

  
 Screening the Japanese Aesthetic - Arts & Entertainment>>Art   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Kano School, which had a tight grip on the artistic tastes of Japanese court and religious life from the 16th century to the end of the imperial system in the 20th century, had no tolerance for artists who ventured outside its standards.
The most noteworthy aspect of the exhibit is not how the Kano artists envisioned their worlds, but how two sets of screens—one from the Minneapolis Institute of Art and one at the Met—are reunited for the first time after four centuries.
Painted by the famous Kano Sansetsu, both were placed back to back at the Tensho-in temple in Kyoto during the early 17th century.
media.www.columbiaspectator.com /media/storage/paper865/news/2005/01/25/ArtsEntertainmentart/Screening.The.Japanese.Aesthetic-2032271.shtml?norewrite200611201313&sourcedomain=www.columbiaspectator.com   (948 words)

  
 residence kano - AiBinari.it   (Site not responding. Last check: )
with the choice which the Kano School made they abandoned painting scenes...
omgeving.Het rondvaren met een kano geeft een ontspannen gevoel en...
Val di Sole,Het Kano- en Rafting Centrum "Val di Sole" en het Riviersportcentrum werken in Val di Sole, Trentino,...
www.aibinari.it /residence/word2/ast_residence+kano.asp   (244 words)

  
 IgoJO.com - kano
Wat is sneller, een kano of een kajak?
An important tool for interpreting Kano results is the self-stated importance...
Do you know where Kano is? Look it up on the map of Nigeria in West Africa...
www.igojo.com /search.php?keywords=kano&page=3&username=&alt_search=1&order_xml=&adult_filter=0&enabledWord=   (186 words)

  
 artnet.com: Resource Library: Kano: (10) Kano Sansetsu
Pupil and adopted son of (8) Kano Sanraku.
After the early death of Sanraku’s eldest son, Kano Shuri Mitsunori, Sanraku adopted Sansetsu and designated him his successor as head of the Kyo Kano studio (see KANO SCHOOL, §3).
Kano: (8) Kano Sanraku, §1: Genre and bird-and-flower paintings
www.artnet.com /library/04/0457/T045726.asp   (0 words)

  
 The New York Times > Magazine > The Murakami Method
Murakami is a great admirer of the Kano School, a dynasty of painters who catered to the shoguns for almost four centuries by taking the principles of Chinese art (like prominent brushstrokes and ink monochrome) and Japanizing them.
The Kano School centered on the successive generations of the Kano family, supplemented by talented students who were adopted and then allowed to take the Kano name.
By the time Sansetsu painted the old plum trees, the distortion and almost Cubist sense of form was possible because there was that breadth allowed in the Kano School.'' Along with their love of color, the Japanese preferred decorative patterning over Chinese naturalism.
www.nytimes.com /2005/04/03/magazine/03MURAKAMI.html?ei=5090&en=7f2505d23b302648&ex=1270267200&adxnnl=1&partner=rssuserland&pagewanted=9&adxnnlx=1133248376-p6LMvptCkBuh2dZPj6VotA   (1112 words)

  
 Shohaku Cat.42
By Shohaku’s time, typologies of brushstrokes were thoroughly absorbed into Japanese painters’ technical vocabulary; in Twelve Landscapes Shohaku demonstrates both his mastery of these modes and his ability to extend beyond their limits.
Like Sansetsu and Eino’s images, Shohaku’s works exhibit a keen interest in styles and historical themes in which Muromachi-period painters excelled.
A pair of folding screens by Kano Motonobu in the Freer Gallery of Art, Chinese Landscapes on Flowers and Grasses of the Four Seasons, is one of the oldest extant examples.
www.aamdocents.org /AAM/Special/05_12Kyoto/KCat42.htm   (1114 words)

  
 PHEdoJR
At the start of the Edo period, the Kano school painters remained influential, and the impressive bird-and-flower fusuma-e in theTenkyuin subtemple of Myoshinji Temple in Kyoto, painted by Eitoku's pupil Kano Sanraku and Sanraku's adopted son Sansetsu, are outstanding works of that genre.
These provided the groundwork for the great popularity which would later be enjoyed by ukiyoe ("floating world pictures") of beautiful women and other subjects related to entertainment and the enjoyment of everyday life.
By around the middle of the Edo period, the Kano school of officially appointed government painters had become completely formulistic and stereotyped, and even Tosa school painters who had tried to preserve yamato-e techniques had nothing new to add to tradition.
web-japan.org /museum/painthist/phedoj/phedojr.html   (719 words)

  
 Kano - NKV: Nederlandstalig Kano Verbond vzw
Kano Sansetsu [Japanese Painter, ca.1590-1651] Guide to pictures of works by Kano Sansetsu in art museum sites and image archives worldwide.
Salg af nye og brugte kajakker, kanoer og tilbehør.
De NKB is een overkoepelende organisatie voor alle kano en kajak disciplines en geeft het blad "KanoSport" uit.
comdirectory.cn /wssp/kano.html   (404 words)

  
 Kano Sansetsu Online
Search Amazon for books related to Kano Sansetsu
Search AllPosters for reproductions of works by Kano Sansetsu
All images and text on this Kano Sansetsu page are copyright 2007 by John Malyon/Artcyclopedia, unless otherwise noted.
www.artcyclopedia.com /artists/kano_sansetsu.html   (0 words)

  
 The Reunion of Su Wi and Li Ling
With this commission, Sansetsu situated the meeting of Su Wu and Li Ling in an exotic landscape that evokes the wintery northern extremes of China, where barbarian tribes of various ethnicities waged war on successive generations of Chinese rulers.
The Kanô family adopted Sansetsu upon his marriage to the daughter of Kanô Sanraku, his teacher.
In the early 1600s, he became head of the school's Kyô Kanô branch, so named because it was centered in the city of Kyoto.
www.dartmouth.edu /~arth17/Reunion.html   (286 words)

  
 225-e.htm
Uta-e (the painting basis on the waka poem) revived at the beginning of the early Kinsei era accompanying the revival of the court world of waka poetry, and "Hatakeyamasyousakutei-siika" also revived as a theme of a painting at that time.
The purpose of this paper is to clarify the details, background, and his aim that Einou who was not specialist of yamato-e drew the painting on the basis of the waka poem eagerly, and to show how to have made up his own style in his producing such a work.
He used the network succeeded from the grandfather Kano Sanraku and father Kano Sansetsu, and learned the technique of yamato-e, and worked on new theme actively.
wwwsoc.nii.ac.jp /bigaku/225_e.htm   (1382 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.