Kanō Sansetsu Explained
was a Japanese painter also known as Kanō Heishiro. He was born in Hizen Province, Kyūshū, and died in Kyoto.[1]
Biography
Sansetsu was apprenticed to Kanō Sanraku, married his daughter, and was adopted by him after the death of Sanraku's eldest son. Later, he became the leader of the Kanō school.[2] He was the father of Kanō Einō.
Works
- Dragon in the clouds, hanging scroll, ink on paper.
- Huang Chuping, hanging scroll, ink on paper.
- Laozi, one of a pair of six-panel folding screens, ink on paper.
- Mount Fuji, hanging scroll, ink and gold on paper.
- The old plum ca. 1645, four sliding door panels (fusuma), ink, color, gold leaf on paper.[3]
- Seabirds on a winter coast, screen, color, India ink, and gold on paper. collection hosotsugi, Kyoto.
- The ten snow incidents, one of a pair of six-panel folding screens, ink and light color on paper.
- Transcendent, hanging scroll, ink on paper.[4]
- Two chickens on thatched roof, hanging scroll, ink and light color on paper.
- Xiwangmu (Seiobo), the Queen Mother of the West and Mu Wang (Bokuo), one of a pair of six-panel folding screens, ink on paper.
Gallery
- Folding screens
- Chinese figure portraits
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Kano Sansetsu . 2007-11-18 . 2002 . The concise Grove dictionary of art . Oxford University Press.
- Book: Hetl-Kuntze, H.. Hans L. C. Jaffé. German Erich Wolf. Far Eastern Art. The Dolphin history of painting. 1969. Thames and Hudson . 119.
- Web site: Attributed to Kano Sansetsu: The Old Plum (1975.268.48). 2007-11-18. October 2006. In Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–..
- Web site: MFABoston . 2007-11-18 . Museum of Fine Arts, Boston .