Noguchi Shohin Explained

Noguchi Shohin
Native Name:野口 小蘋
Native Name Lang:ja
Birth Date:25 February 1847
Birth Place:Namba, Osaka
Nationality:Japanese
Known For:Bunjin painting
Children: (daughter)
(daughter)

(25 February 1847 – 17 February 1917) was a Japanese painter.

Biography

Shohin was born in Ōsaka Prefecture in 1847.

Shohin was appointed an Imperial household artist — an honour for the most distinguished artists — in 1904 and her pictures were bought by the Japanese Imperial family.[1] She was a friend of the statesman Kido Takayoshi and she and Okuhara Seiko enjoyed his patronage. Kido and the two of them would create gassaku which are collaborative paintings that include both pictures and text.[2]

Her daughters Iku and Shokei also became artists.[1]

In 1982 Yamanashi Prefectural Museum of Art had an exhibition of her art.

Style

Her surviving paintings seem to show a woman who felt equal to men in her culture. She illustrates women who appear as literati painting, playing music and doing calligraphy. Her paintings show some independence as women's paintings of her time usually followed tradition or the subjects laid down by the artist's schools.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kirstin Olsen. Chronology of Women's History. registration. 1994. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-28803-6. 202–.
  2. Book: Ellen P. Conant. Challenging Past And Present: The Metamorphosis of Nineteenth-Century Japanese Art. 2006. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-2937-7. 178–180.
  3. Book: Marsha Smith Weidner. Flowering in the Shadows: Women in the History of Chinese and Japanese Painting. January 1990. University of Hawaii Press. 978-0-8248-1149-5. 233–.