Undated photo of the artist
Tomita Keisen was born in Hakata (present day Fukuoka) into a family of well-off noodle merchants. His given name was Shigegorō 鎮五郎. At the age of 12 he began studying Kanō school painting with Kinugasa Morimasa (Tankoku) (1852-1912). At the age of 17, after the closing of the family business, he travelled to Kyoto to apprentice with the Shijō style painter Tsuji Kakō (1871-1931). He also studied Heian Buddhist painting and nanga (traditional Japanese painting). He exhibited in the official Bunten, Teiten and Inten exhibitions. He exhibited paintings with Saiko Nihon Bijutsuin (Reorganized Japan Fine Art Academy) in 1915, and became a member in 1916. He is credited with creating a new style of kachō-ga and was one of the foremost painters of his generation.
"Keisen combined aspects of various Japanese painting styles—literati, yamato-e, shijo, zen, rinpa—with Western expressionism to achieve his poetic effects and still-apparent originality."1
The Seattle Asian Art Museum notes that the artist "had an unconventional personality, which reflected both in his practice of Zen and his fondness for drinking and wild nightlife." He died at the height of his career of a cerebral hemorrhage, possibly brought on by his lifestyle.
Ubune (Cormorant Fishing Boats)
1912
sumi on paper/hanging scroll
199.0×77.0 cm
The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto
J00459
Fukuoka Art Museum October 10 - November 23, 2009.
Tomita Keisen 冨田溪仙 (1879 - 1936) born in Hakata, was an active Japanese-style artist living in Kyoto. Yokoyama Taikan acknowledged his talent. Although Tomita Keisen was living in Kyoto, he exhibited his works at Inten Exhibition in Tokyo, and he imbued the Japanese art world with his unique talent in the Taisho and Showa periods in Japan. It has been approximately 30 years since a grand-scale retrospective exhibition was held in his hometown and will comprehensively introduce his lifetime representative works. It will present great opportunities of reconfirming the fascination manifested in his broad-minded free spirit and the significance of it.
signed 渓山 人 Keizan jin with unread seal
signed 渓山 人 Keizan jin with unread seal
signed 渓仙 Keisen with unread seal
signed 渓仙 Keisen with unread seal
signed 渓仙 Keisen with unread seal
signed 渓 Kei with unread seal
last revision:
12-20-23
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