Difference between revisions of "Kishi Ganku"

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Kishi Ganku was a self-taught [[Edo period]] painter, known especially for his paintings of [[tigers]].
 
Kishi Ganku was a self-taught [[Edo period]] painter, known especially for his paintings of [[tigers]].
  
His personal style drew from influences of [[literati painting]], the [[Nagasaki school]] of Chinese-style painting, elements of Western realism, and the trend for ''[[shasei]]'' - drawing from life. Though no living tigers could be seen in Japan, in [[1798]] Ganku received a tiger's head which had been imported through [[Nagasaki]] as a gift; this allowed him to sketch a tiger's head with greater accuracy.
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His personal style drew from influences of [[literati painting]], the [[Nagasaki school]] of Chinese-style painting (including especially the works of [[Shen Nanpin]]), elements of Western realism, and the trend for ''[[shasei]]'' - drawing from life. Though no living tigers could be seen in Japan, in [[1798]] Ganku received a tiger's head which had been imported through [[Nagasaki]] as a gift; this allowed him to sketch a tiger's head with greater accuracy.
  
 
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[[Category:Artists and Artisans]]
 
[[Category:Artists and Artisans]]
[[Category:Edo Period]
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[[Category:Edo Period]]

Latest revision as of 09:20, 10 January 2020

"Tiger and Bamboo" by Ganku. Santa Barbara Museum of Art.

Kishi Ganku was a self-taught Edo period painter, known especially for his paintings of tigers.

His personal style drew from influences of literati painting, the Nagasaki school of Chinese-style painting (including especially the works of Shen Nanpin), elements of Western realism, and the trend for shasei - drawing from life. Though no living tigers could be seen in Japan, in 1798 Ganku received a tiger's head which had been imported through Nagasaki as a gift; this allowed him to sketch a tiger's head with greater accuracy.

References

  • Gallery labels, Santa Barbara Museum of Art.[1]