Online Encyclopedia

KYOSAI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 960 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KYOSAI  , SHO-FU (1831-1889),

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Japanese painter, was born at Koga in the province of Shimotsuke,
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Japan, in 1831 . After working for a short time, as a boy, with Kuniyoshi, he received his
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artistic training in the studio of
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Kano Dohaku, but soon abandoned the formal traditions of his master for the greater freedom of the popular school . During the
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political ferment which produced and followed the revolution of 1867, Kyosai attained a considerable reputation as a caricaturist . He was three times arrested and imprisoned by the authorities of the shogunate . Soon after the assumption of effective power by the mikado, a
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great congress of painters and men of letters was held, at which Kyosai was
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present . He again expressed his opinion of the new
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movement in a caricature, which had a great popular success, but also brought him into the hands of the police—this time of the opposite party . Kyosai must be considered the greatest successor of Hokusai (of whom, however, he was not a pupil), and as the first political caricaturist of Japan . His work—like his life—is somewhat wild and undisciplined,and "occasionally smacks of the
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sake cup." But if he did not possess Hokusai's dignity, power and reticence, he substituted an exuberant fancy, which always lends
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interest to draughtsmanship of very great technical excellence . In addition to his caricatures, Kyosai painted a large number of pictures and sketches, often choosing subjects from the folk-lore of his country . A
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fine collection of these
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works is preserved in the
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British Museum; and there are also good examples in the
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National
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Art Library at South
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Kensington, and the Musee Guimet at Paris . Among his illustrated books may be mentioned Yehon Taka-kagami, Illustrations of Hawks (5 vols., 1870, &c.); Kyosai Gwafu (188o); Kyosai Dongwa; Kyosai Raku-gwa; Kyosai Riaku-gwa; Kyosai Mangwa (1881); Kyosai Suigwa (1882); and Kyosai Gwaden (1887) . The latter is illustrated by him under the name of Kawanabe Toyoku, and two of its four volumes are devoted to an account of his own art and
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life .

He died in 1889 . See Guimet (E.) and Regamey (F.), Promenades japonaises (Paris, 1880) ;

Anderson (W.),Catalogue of Japanese
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Painting in the British Museum (
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London, 1886) ; Mortimer Menpes, " A
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Personal View of Japanese Art: A Lesson from Kyosai,"
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Magazine of Art (1888) . (E . F .

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