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About 1589 he painted a suiboku sansui ("landscape painting in water ink") on sliding doors in the Daikoku Temple, and in 1591 he and his disciples painted the "Dai-kimbeki shōheki-ga" (a great wall painting with the emphasis on the colours of gold and blue) of the Shōun Temple, commissioned by chief imperial minister Toyotomi Hideyoshi for his son, who had been born prematurely and had died.
These values in combination with titration equations provide the necessary volumes of water, ink and Intralipid to achieve desired phantom optical properties [ 57].
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He was strongly influenced by Sesshū, a 15th-century master of suiboku-ga ("water-ink painting"), and even named himself Sesshū V.
His paintings are closer to the suiboku-ga ("water-ink painting") tradition than are the more elaborately detailed paintings of his more famous brother, Tanyū.
1547 1618 Japan Unkoku Tōgan, (born 1547 died 1618, Japan), Japanese painter best remembered as a suiboku-ga ("water-ink painting") artist.
Masanobu was influenced by the priest-painter Tenshō Shūbun and, like him, worked in the suiboku ("water-ink") painting tradition inspired by Chinese monochromatic ink painting.
Nōami, original name Nakao Shinnō (born 1397, Japan died 1494) Japanese poet, painter, and art critic, the first nonpriest who painted in the suiboku ("water-ink"), or Chinese, style.
He also did Chinese-style, or suiboku ("water-ink"), paintings executed rapidly with a stiff brush on screens, such as "The Four Grayhairs and Three Laughers" (Henjōkō Temple, Mount Kōya).
1397 Japan 1494 Nōami, original name Nakao Shinnō (born 1397, Japan died 1494), Japanese poet, painter, and art critic, the first nonpriest who painted in the suiboku ("water-ink"), or Chinese, style.
Sesson Shūkei, original name Satake Heizo (born 1504, Hitachi, Japan died c. 1589, Iwashiro province), Japanese artist who was the most distinguished and individualistic talent among the numerous painters who worked in the style of Sesshū, the 15th-century artist considered the greatest of the Japanese suiboku-ga ("water-ink") painters.
Like his father, Masanobu, the first of the Kanō painters, Motonobu served the Ashikaga shoguns (a family of military rulers who governed Japan from 1338 to 1573) and inherited the Chinese-inspired monochromatic ink-painting style (suiboku-ga, "water-ink painting") favoured by the Ashikagas.
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