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  2. Ink wash painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ink_wash_painting

    He studied a wide range of early Chinese ink wash painting styles and played an important role in the development of Japanese Zen ink wash painting. Colleagues of Chinese ink painter Muqi (active in 13th century) first brought Muxi painting to Japan in the late 13th century. Japanese Zen monks follow and learn the gibbon pictures painted by ...

  3. Haboku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haboku

    Splashed-ink Landscape (破墨山水, Haboku sansui) by Sesshū Tōyō, 1495 Sesshu's landscape in hatsuboku style. Haboku (破墨) and Hatsuboku (溌墨) are both painting techniques employed in suiboku (ink-wash painting) in China and Japan, as seen in landscape paintings, involving an abstract simplification of forms and freedom of brushwork.

  4. Guan Liang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guan_Liang

    Guan Liang was born in Panyu, Guangdong province in 1900. In 1917 he went to Tokyo, Japan, where he studied oil painting under Fujishima Takeji. [4] After returning to China in 1922, he taught at the Shanghai Fine Arts School and the National Academy of Art (present-day China Academy of Art) in Hangzhou.

  5. Wash (visual arts) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wash_(visual_arts)

    The classic East Asian tradition of ink wash painting uses black ink in various levels of dilution. Historically associated with the four arts of the scholar-officials , the technique was often applied to landscapes in traditional Chinese , Japanese , and Korean painting .

  6. This rare female painter in Edo Japan was ‘coveted’ for her ...

    www.aol.com/rare-female-painter-edo-japan...

    Kiyohara Yukinobu struck out on a path in the late 17th century that few women in Japan had navigated, becoming an accomplished artist in the Kanō school — and, for a century after, was name ...

  7. Catching a catfish with a gourd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catching_a_Catfish_with_a...

    It is one of the earliest suiboku (ink wash) paintings in Japan and was designated as a National Treasure of Japan in 1951. The painting is accompanied by many inscriptions, and may be considered an example of shigajiku (a "poem-and-painting scroll"). Josetsu was born and trained as an artist in China but settled in Japan.

  8. Japanese painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_painting

    Areas of subject matter where Chinese influence has been repeatedly significant include Buddhist religious painting, ink-wash painting of landscapes in the Chinese literati painting tradition, calligraphy of sinograms, [1] and the painting of animals and plants, especially birds and flowers. However, distinctively Japanese traditions have ...

  9. Haboku sansui - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haboku_sansui

    Haboku sansui (破墨山水図, haboku sansui-zu, Broken Ink Landscape) is a splashed-ink landscape painting on a hanging scroll. It was made by the Japanese artist Sesshū Tōyō in 1495, in the Muromachi period. The ink wash painting is classified as a National Treasure of Japan and currently held by the Tokyo National Museum. [1] [2]