Taikō Josetsu
Japanese painter
Taikō Josetsu, (flourished 15th century, Kyōto), 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 Shōkoku-ji (in present Kyōto), where his pupil, the prominent painter Tenshō Shūbun (flourished early–mid-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 Ryōsoku-in monastery, Kyōto.
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