2,479 bytes added
, 01:33, 25 January 2010
*''Died: [[1694]]''
*''Distinction: Pioneer of ''[[ukiyo-e]]''''
*''Sons: [[Hishikawa Morofusa]]''
*''Japanese'': 菱川師宣 ''(Hishikawa Moronobu)''
Hishikawa Moronobu was a painter and print designer, considered today one of the chief founders or consolidators of the art form known as ''[[ukiyo-e]]''. Chronologically and stylistically, he represents the last of those who are sometimes called "the Ukiyo-e Primitives" and the first artists of post-Primitive, true ''ukiyo-e''.
Born in [[Awa province]] (today [[Chiba prefecture]]) to a father who embroidered tapestries by trade, Moronobu first settled in [[Edo]] in the late 1660s. Having apparently picked up skills painting in the [[Tosa school|Tosa]] and [[Kano school|Kanô school]] modes, he soon became active as a [[fuzokuga|genre]] painter and book illustrator.
He may have studied under the [[Kambun Master]], one of the most prominent early ''ukiyo-e'' artists whose name, unfortunately, is lost to time. Moronobu did not simply copy older styles, however, but developed his own distinctive style, in which he would remain quite consistent throughout his works. ''Ukiyo-e'' specialist [[Richard Lane]] describes Moronobu's earlier works as "evocative yet somewhat austere, even slightly wooden," adding "Moronobu soon progressed to [a] more lively, dynamic style ... [his] figures [becoming] fuller and more rounded"<ref>Lane. p46.</ref>.
Moronobu's illustrations appeared in at least 150 books, only about one-quarter of which were ''[[shunga]]'' (erotic images). Among his most famous works were book illustrations made in collaboration with the novelist [[Ihara Saikaku]], as well as picture-book re-formattings of Saikaku's works.
Though perhaps most well-known for his book illustrations and prints, Moronobu was also an accomplished artist, his ''[[bijinga]]'' paintings consolidating the theme or sub-genre, and establishing motifs and stylistic elements which would be seen in ''bijinga'' paintings ever since, through the Edo period as well as in the ''[[nihonga]]'' of the modern period.
Moronobu had a number of pupils or followers, including his son [[Hishikawa Morofusa]], [[Hishikawa Moroshige]] (who took on the master's surname as an [[art-name]]), and [[Ishikawa Ryusen|Ishikawa Ryûsen]] (aka Tomonobu).
==References==
*Lane, Richard. ''Images from the Floating World''. New York: Konecky & Konecky, 1978. pp44-51.
<references/>
[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Artists and Artisans]]