Yamamoto Hōsui Explained

Yamamoto Hōsui
Birth Date:August 12, 1850
Birth Place:Ena District, Gifu
Death Place:Tokyo
Nationality:Japanese
Field:Painting
Training:Antonio Fontanesi

was a Japanese artist. He is also sometimes known as Yamamoto Tamenosuke.

Biography

He was born in Mino Province. He first trained in the Nanga (Bunjinga) style before studying Western painting with Charles Wirgman and Goseda Horyu (1827–92) and under Antonio Fontanesi. Yamamoto then went to Paris, where he remained for over ten years and studied at the school of Fine Arts as Gérôme’s student 1878-1887. While in Paris he mixed with the city's artists and intelligentsia,[1] and he supplied work for the illustrated edition of Robert de Montesquiou's Les chauves-souris. Returning to Japan he opened a painting academy, the Seikokan, in Edo, teaching the French style of the Barbizon school.[2] This was later renamed the Tenshin Dojo after his friend and fellow-artist Kuroda Seiki returned to Japan and joined him in teaching there, introducing the techniques of plein-air painting.

Among his works are Junishi (1892), a cycle of twelve oil paintings in the Western style based on the theme of the signs of the Chinese zodiac (ten of which are extant).[3] [4]

References

  1. http://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/research/forefront/message/rakuyu09_b.htm
  2. Frederic, Louis, Japan Encyclopedia, Harvard University Press, 2005
  3. http://www.marunouchi.com/e/city/ichigokan_10_02.html
  4. http://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/research/forefront/message/rakuyu09_b.htm