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Kanō Masanobu

 
Art Encyclopedia: Kano Masanobu

( fl 1463-96; d ?1530). At an early age he went to Kyoto, where he is thought to have studied Kanga (Chinese-style ink painting) with OGURI SOTAN, the painter-in-residence (goyo eshi) to the Ashikaga shogun. Sotan lived at the Shokokuji, a Zen temple in Kyoto patronized by the Ashikaga family, and the earliest record of Masanobu's activity as an artist

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Zhou Maoshu Appreciating Lotuses, a hanging scroll by Kanō Masanobu

Kanō Masanobu (狩野正信; 1434? – August 2, 1530?, Kyoto) was the chief painter of the Ashikaga shogunate and is generally considered the founder of the Kanō school of painting.

The Kanō school was a style of painting that maintained dominance over 400 years from Masanobu's time up through the Meiji Restoration (1868). But it was not truly codified into a distinct style under Masanobu; this took place when Masanobu's son Kanō Motonobu took over as head of the school.

Masanobu was influenced by the priest-painter Tenshō Shūbun, and some sources indicate that he may have received the bulk of his artistic education under Shubun. He worked in the suiboku style, derived from Chinese painting, but added a Japanese touch to the style with more defined forms. Very few of his works survive.

Kanō Masanobu served the Muromachi government as an official painter (御用絵師, goyō eshi), succeeding Sōtan to the post.

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