TAIKO JOSETSU


Meaning of TAIKO JOSETSU in English

flourished 15th century, , Kyoto priest and painter, regarded as the first of the long line of Japanese Zen Buddhist priests who painted in the Chinese-inspired suiboku (monochromatic ink painting) style. Josetsu was associated with the Shokoku-ji (in present Kyoto), where his pupil, the prominent painter Tensho Shubun (flourished earlymid-15th century) also resided. Josetsu's most important work is an ink landscape painting, Catching a Catfish with a Gourd. It was painted c. 1413, commissioned by Ashikaga Yoshimochi, the 4th Muromachi shogun and a disciple of Zen. It is one of the earliest suiboku paintings in Japan. The subject is Zen inspired; the soft ink-wash technique reflects the influence of Mu Ch'i Fa-ch'ang, a 13th-century Chinese Zen Buddhist painter whose style was widely emulated by the Japanese priest-painters. Josetsu is also believed to have done the boldly executed group portrait of Buddha, Lao-tzu, and Confucius, The Three Teachers, located in the Ryosoku-in monastery, Kyoto.

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