Mori Sosen

Mori Sosen (森 狙仙, 1747 – August 18, 1821[1]) was a Japanese painter of the Shijō school during the Edo period.

Mori Sosen is famous for his many paintings depicting monkeys. He also painted other animals, such as deer, boars, and peafowl. Robert van Gulik called him "an undisputed master" of the painting of the Japanese macaque. When a gibbon was brought in Japan by the Dutch in 1809, creating somewhat of a sensation (gibbons had long been depicted by Japanese artists, based on Chinese paintings of the animal, but no one in Japan had seen a live gibbon for centuries), it was Mori who had created a graphic record of this event as well.[2]

It is unknown whether he was born in Osaka, Nagasaki, or Nishinomiya, but he lived in Osaka for most of his life.[3]

References

  1. The Great Japan Exhibition: Art of the Edo Period 1600-1868, ISBN 0297780352
  2. Robert van Gulik, The gibbon in China. An essay in Chinese animal lore. E.J. Brill, Leiden, Holland. (1967). Pages 98-99.
  3. "Japanese Wikipedia". ja.wikipedia.org. Retrieved 2017-11-08.


gollark: > imagine utilizing the stack instead of dynamically allocating your own stack.If you do recursive calls, you are utilizing staqa.
gollark: There are some nice Rust bindings for Janet.
gollark: Thus recursion without stack overflows.
gollark: COOL languages optimize these instead of actually calling it normally and making the stack bigger.
gollark: It's where a function does another function call of some sort as the last thing in it.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.