Katsukawa Shunsen was born in 1762.
Natori Shunsen was born in 1886.
Katsukawa Shunkō I was born in 1743.
Katsukawa Shunshō was born in 1726.
Natori Shunsen died in 1960.
Katsukawa Shunkō I died in 1812.
Katsukawa Shunshō died in 1792.
The cast of Genkai-nada - 1976 includes: Jinpachi Nezu as Yakuzu Reisen Ri as Shunsen
Yes, Hokusai had siblings. He had a younger brother named Katsukawa Shunko, who was also an artist, as well as a sister. However, specific details about his siblings' lives and contributions are less documented compared to Hokusai's own prolific career as a painter and printmaker.
Yes, Hokusai was married twice. His first marriage was to a woman named Katsukawa, with whom he had several children, but the marriage ended in divorce. He later married a woman named Oei, who was also an artist, and they had a daughter together, but this marriage was also tumultuous and did not last long. Overall, Hokusai's personal life was marked by instability, reflecting the challenges he faced as an artist.
Katsushika Hokusai, the renowned Japanese ukiyo-e painter and printmaker, did not attend a formal school in the traditional sense. Instead, he began his artistic training at the age of 14 as an apprentice in the workshop of a ukiyo-e artist named Katsukawa Shunshō. This apprenticeship provided him with hands-on experience and exposure to various artistic techniques, which significantly influenced his later work. Throughout his career, Hokusai continued to learn and evolve his style through practice and experimentation.
Reisen Ri has: Played Kazuko in "Sengo zankoku monogatari" in 1968. Played Katsu Samejima in "Joshuu sasori: Kemono-beya" in 1973. Played Shunsen in "Genkai-nada" in 1976. Performed in "3-nen B-gumi Kinpachi Sensei" in 1979. Performed in "Yoru o kakete" in 2002. Played Matsu in "Warabi no kou" in 2003. Played Reiko Inoue in "Tokyo wankei: Destiny of love" in 2004. Played Yamada in "Kamisama no pazuru" in 2008.
Katsushika Hokusai was born on October 31, 1760, in Honjo, Edo, of unknown parentage. While Hokusai moved at least ninety times throughout his lifetime, he never left this region. He was adopted as a child by the prestigious artisan-family Nakajima Ise, who made mirrors for the shogun.As a teenager, Hokusai was a delivery boy for a booklending shop and also apprenticed to a woodblock carver. At the age of eighteen, Hokusai began serious training in print design under Katsukawa Shunsho (1726-1792), an eminent designer in Kabuki actor and theater prints. Under the name Shunsho, Hokusai illustrated storybooks and created prints depicting beautiful women. After his teacher's death in 1793, Hokusai entered a period of wandering, searching for different styles and themes in association with artists outside the Katsukawa School.Hokusai changed his artistic name at least twenty times. In 1797, the artist began using the name Hokusai. Frequently, he combined it with others, creating a variety of names, such as Sori arateme Hokusai ("Hokusai changed from Sori"), Hokusai Sori, or Gakyojin Hokusai ("A Man Mad about Art, Hokusai").Around 1804, Hokusai studied Western styles based on Dutch copperplate prints. In his new work influenced by the Dutch prints, Hokusai gave an illusion of space and landscape elements using light and dark shadows and signed his name horizontally in imitation of Western artists.Between 1811-1830, Hokusai published an enormous number of illustrated books. The most important was Hokusai Manga, the artist's lifelong project, which took thirty-eight years. Only two volumes were published at this time.