Shunsuke Matsumoto

Shunsuke Matsumoto (松本 竣介, Matsumoto Shunsuke, 1912–1948) was a Japanese painter, who primarily painted in the Yōga ("Western painting") style.

Shunsuke Matsumoto
松本竣介
Shunsuke Matsumoto at his atelier in Shimoochiai (1940s)
Born
Satō Shunsuke (俊介)

(1912-04-19)April 19, 1912
DiedJune 8, 1948(1948-06-08) (aged 36)
NationalityJapanese
Known forWestern painting
Notable work
Machi 1936

Matsumoto was born on April 19, 1912, in Shibuya, Tokyo, as Shunsuke Satō (佐藤俊介).[1] He spent his childhood and youth in northern Honshu, first in Hanamaki, Iwate, and later in Morioka, where he began attending middle school in 1925. The future sculptor Yasutake Funakoshi was among his schoolmates and in the same grade. Matsumoto contracted cerebrospinal meningitis which caused the loss of his hearing. Subsequently he developed an interest in becoming a painter, and left Morioka for Tokyo in 1929.[2]

In Tokyo, Matsumoto took classes at the Taiheiyō Gakai Institute (太平洋画会研究所) and became friends with Saburo Aso (麻生三郎) and Masaaki Terada (寺田政明). In 1935, he exhibited some of his works at the Fifth Nova Exhibition, and his work Buildings was accepted for the 22nd Nika Exhibition. He went on presenting his work at the Nika Exhibitions until 1943.[2]

Matsumoto died at the age of 36 on June 8, 1948, from heart failure aggravated by tuberculosis and bronchial asthma. [1]

Notes

  1. Mark H. Sandler : The Living Artist: Matsumoto Shunsuke's Reply to the State. Art Journal, Vol. 55, No. 3, Japan 1868–1945: Art, Architecture, and National Identity (Autumn 1996), pp. 74–82
  2. Matsumoto Shunsuke - website of the Iwate Museum of Art (retrieved 2013-05-01)
gollark: Not *exactly*. There is a nonzero chance that you somehow completely failed to notice that it had an 8 on it and it lands on that, or that the dice is somehow swapped out for one with 8s on it as you roll it, or that sort of thing.
gollark: But I want them to implement self replicating spreadsheet cells to run some weird cellular automaton to run a Turing machine to parse HTML.
gollark: I don't know if it has HTTP capability, but it could totally sort of do HTML/CSS if it is.
gollark: Excel is Turing-complete isn't it?
gollark: I don't think people do much of the time, though.

References

  • Mark H. Sandler : The Living Artist: Matsumoto Shunsuke's Reply to the State. Art Journal, Vol. 55, No. 3, Japan 1868-1945: Art, Architecture, and National Identity (Autumn, 1996), pp. 74–82
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.