Baiōken Eishun

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File:Baioken Eishun - 'Courtesan in a Procession'.jpg
Courtesan in a Procession (遊女道中図), c. 1720-1730

Baiōken Eishun (Template:Langx; active c.Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".) was a Japanese painter and print artist of the Kaigetsudō school of ukiyo-e art. He is also alternatively known as Hasegawa Eishun Script error: No such module "Lang"., Baiōken Nagaharu, Takeda Harunobu[1] and a number of other art-names. He produced both hanging scroll full-color paintings typical of the Kaigetsudō style and mode, and a number of designs for illustrations for woodblock printed books.

Richard Lane describes Eishun's work as very similar to that of Matsuno Chikanobu, though the courtesans in his bijinga (paintings of beauties) are somewhat taller, slimmer, and more serious-looking. Eishun, along with Chikanobu, represents something of a revival of the Kaigetsudō school which fell into decline in the preceding decades following the exile of its founder, Kaigetsudō Ando, in 1714.

Notes

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  1. Morse, Anne Nishimura et al. Drama and Desire: Japanese Paintings from the Floating World 1690-1850. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts, 2007. p80.

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References

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