HISHIDA SHUNSO


Meaning of HISHIDA SHUNSO in English

born Sept. 21, 1874, Nagano prefecture, Japan died Sept. 16, 1911, Tokyo painter who, with his friend Yokoyama Taikan, contributed to the revitalization of traditional Japanese painting. Hishida studied in Tokyo, first with a painter of the Kano school (which emphasized the use of Chinese subject matter and technique) and then at the Tokyo Fine Arts School with Hashimoto Gaho. In 1898 he joined the Japan Fine Arts Academy, where he and Taikan gradually mastered the art of reconciling traditional Japanese line drawing with a Western Impressionistic style (pejoratively known as morotai, or vague, indistinct). Among his best-known works are Ochiba (1909; Fallen Leaves) and Kuroi neko (1910; A Black Cat).

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.