When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of Japanese artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_artists

    This is a list of Japanese artists. This list is intended to encompass Japanese who are primarily fine artists. This list is intended to encompass Japanese who are primarily fine artists. For information on those who work primarily in film, television, advertising, manga, anime, video games, or performance arts, please see the relevant ...

  3. List of National Treasures of Japan (paintings) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Treasures...

    [4] [5] This list contains 166 paintings from 7th-century Asuka period to the early modern 19th-century Edo period. In fact the number of paintings presented is more than 166, because in some cases groups of related paintings are combined to form a single entry. The paintings listed show Buddhist themes, landscapes, portraits and court scenes ...

  4. Cypress Trees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypress_Trees

    The painting is a polychrome-and-gold screen that depicts a cypress tree against the backdrop of gold-leafed clouds, and surrounded by the dark blue waters of a pond. The painting stretches across two four-panel folding screens from circa 1590; it is made of paper covered with gold leaf, depicting a cypress tree, a symbol of longevity in Japan.

  5. Japanese art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_art

    Japanese art consists of a wide range of art styles and media that includes ancient pottery, sculpture, ink painting and calligraphy on silk and paper, ukiyo-e paintings and woodblock prints, ceramics, origami, bonsai, and more recently manga and anime. It has a long history, ranging from the beginnings of human habitation in Japan, sometime in ...

  6. Hiroshige - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiroshige

    Hiroshige built on the series' success by following it with others, such as the Illustrated Places of Naniwa (1834), Famous Places of Kyoto (1835), another Eight Views of Ōmi (1834). As he had never been west of Kyoto, Hiroshige-based his illustrations of Naniwa (modern Osaka) and Ōmi Province on pictures found in books and paintings. [14]

  7. Shōrin-zu byōbu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shōrin-zu_byōbu

    The work is a development of suibokuga (水墨画, ink-wash paintings) made with Chinese ink (墨, sumi), using dark and light shades on a silk or paper medium.It combines naturalistic Chinese ideas of ink painting by Muqi Fachang (Chinese: 牧溪法常; pinyin: Mu-ch'i Fa-ch'ang) with themes from the Japanese yamato-e (大和絵) landscape tradition, influenced by the "splashed ink" (溌墨 ...

  8. Category:Japanese painters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japanese_painters

    Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more

  9. Plum Park in Kameido - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plum_Park_in_Kameido

    Number 27 in One Hundred Famous Views of Edo, Plum Orchard in Kamada (蒲田の梅園 Kamada no umezono, shows a similar colour scheme and subject.. The print shows part of the most famous tree in Edo, the "Sleeping Dragon Plum" (臥竜梅, garyūbai), which had blossoms "so white when full in bloom as to drive off the darkness" [attribution needed] and branches that travelled looping across ...