- Names
- 神坂雪佳
- KAMISAKA Sekka (index name)
- Kamisaka Sekka (display name)
- 神坂雪佳 (Japanese display name)
- かみさか せっか (transliterated hiragana)
- 神坂吉隆 (real name)
- Date of birth
- 1866-01-12
- Birth place
- Kyoto
- Date of death
- 1942-01-04
- Gender
- Male
- Fields of activity
- Painting
- Crafts
- 2014
- Tokyo Bunkazai Kenkyūjo (Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties). “Kamisaka Sekka.” Nihon Bijutsu Nenkan Shosai Bukkosha Kiji. Published 2014-04-14 https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/bukko/8534.html https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/bukko/8534.html
日本美術年鑑 / Year Book of Japanese Art
「神坂雪佳」『日本美術年鑑』昭和18年版(75頁)京都の工芸図案家として知られた神坂雪佳は1月4日嵯峨野の自宅で逝去した。享年77。本名は吉隆、慶応2年1月12日京都粟田の士族として生れた。明治14年鈴木瑞彦について四条派の絵を学んだが、23年岸光景に師事、各種工芸意匠図案及工芸製作の組織を研究し、傍ら光琳派の画風を修学した。32年京都市選任技師、34年にはグラスゴー博覧会に際して渡欧、38年京都市美術工芸学校教諭、40年には佳都美会を創立して工...
Wikipedia
Kamisaka Sekka (神坂 雪佳, 1866–1942) was an important artistic figure in early twentieth-century Japan. Born in Kyoto to a Samurai family, his talents for art and design were recognized early. He eventually allied himself with the traditional Rinpa school of art. He is considered the last great proponent of this artistic tradition. Sekka also worked in lacquer and in a variety of other media.As traditional Japanese styles became unfashionable (such as Rimpa style), Japan implemented policies to promote the country's unique artistic style by upgrading the status of traditional artists who infused their craft with a dose of modernism. In 1901, Sekka was sent by the Japanese government to Glasgow where he was heavily influenced by Art Nouveau. He sought to learn more about the Western attraction to Japonism, and which elements or facets of Japanese art would be more attractive to the West. Returning to Japan, he taught at the newly opened Kyoto Municipal School of Arts and Crafts, experimented with Western tastes, styles, and methods, and incorporated them into his otherwise traditional Japanese-style works. While he sticks to traditional Japanese subject matter, and some elements of Rimpa painting, the overall effect is very Western and modern. He uses bright colors in large swaths, his images seeming on the verge of being patterns rather than proper pictures of a subject; the colors and patterns seem almost to \"pop\", giving the paintings an almost three-dimensional quality.
- 2023-02-20