His famous ''[[uki-e]]'' (vanishing point perspective) painting of a Korean procession through the streets of Edo, with [[Mt. Fuji]] and [[Edo castle]] visible in the far background, is said to depict the [[1748]] Korean mission. Slips of paper attached to the box in which the scroll is stored at the Kobe City Museum indicate that it was commissioned for the young [[Tayasu Kojiro|Tayasu Kojirô]] (d. [[1653]], age 9; son of [[Tayasu Munetake]] and grandson of [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Yoshimune]]). However, for such an unknown painter to attract a commission from such an elite patron has led some scholars to suggest Tôei might be a pseudonym for another, more prominent, painter of the time. | His famous ''[[uki-e]]'' (vanishing point perspective) painting of a Korean procession through the streets of Edo, with [[Mt. Fuji]] and [[Edo castle]] visible in the far background, is said to depict the [[1748]] Korean mission. Slips of paper attached to the box in which the scroll is stored at the Kobe City Museum indicate that it was commissioned for the young [[Tayasu Kojiro|Tayasu Kojirô]] (d. [[1653]], age 9; son of [[Tayasu Munetake]] and grandson of [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Yoshimune]]). However, for such an unknown painter to attract a commission from such an elite patron has led some scholars to suggest Tôei might be a pseudonym for another, more prominent, painter of the time. |