Hanabusa Itchō
Hanabusa Itchō (英 一蝶, 1652 – February 7, 1724) was a Japanese painter, calligrapher, and haiku poet. He originally trained in the Kanō style, under Kanō Yasunobu, but ultimately rejected that style and became a literati (bunjin). He was also known as Hishikawa Waō and by a number of other art-names.
Biography
Born in Osaka[1] and the son of a physician, he was originally named Taga Shinkō. He studied Kanō painting, but soon abandoned the school and his master to form his own style, which would come to be known as the Hanabusa school.
He was exiled in 1698, for parodying one of the shogun's concubines in painting, to the island of Miyake-jima; he would not return until 1710. That year, in Edo, the artist would formally take the name Hanabusa Itchō.
Most of his paintings depicted typical urban life in Edo, and were approached from the perspective of a literati painter. His style, in-between the Kanō and ukiyo-e, is said to have been "more poetic and less formalistic than the Kanō school, and typical of the "bourgeois" spirit of the Genroku period".[2]
Hanabusa was the master of the later painter Sawaki Suushi.[3]
Hanabusa studied poetry under the master Matsuo Bashō, and is said to have been an excellent calligrapher as well.
See also
- Hanabusa Itchō II - son and pupil of Itchō
- nanga - "literati painting"
Notes
- ↑ Lane, Richard (1978). "Images of the Floating World." Old Saybrook, CT: Konecky & Konecky.
- ↑ Frederic, Louis (2002). "Japan Encyclopedia." Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
- ↑ http://pinktentacle.com/2008/02/edo-period-monster-paintings-by-sawaki-suushi/
References
- Lane, Richard. (1978). Images from the Floating World, The Japanese Print. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780192114471; OCLC 5246796
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hanabusa Itcho. |
- Bridge of dreams: the Mary Griggs Burke collection of Japanese art, a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Hanabusa Itchō (see index)