ART PLATFORM JAPAN Research Portal for Art in Japan by NCAR

河野通勢KŌNO Michisei

1895-06-10 – 1950-03-31

A1361

Names

河野通勢

KŌNO Michisei (index name)

Kōno Michisei (display name)

河野通勢 (Japanese display name)

こうの みちせい (transliterated hiragana)

Date of birth
1895-06-10
Birth place
Gunma Prefecture
Date of death
1950-03-31
Death place
Koganei City, Tokyo
Gender
male
Fields of activity
Painting

2019
Tokyo Bunkazai Kenkyūjo (Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties). “Kōno Michisei.” Nihon Bijutsu Nenkan Shosai Bukkosha Kiji. Last modified 2019-06-06. (in Japanese). https://www.tobunken.go.jp/materials/bukko/8936.html

日本美術年鑑 / Year Book of Japanese Art

新聞小説の挿絵に特異の境地を出して大衆的人気をよんだペートル河野通勢は3月31日逝去した。年55。明治28年群馬県に生れ、一時は長野にも住んでいたことがある。二科会第1回から出品し、草土社展にも発表、大正13年春陽会賞をうけ、15年春陽会々員となつたが、昭和4年国展会員に推薦されて以後この会にとどまつた。代表作には11回文展の「自画像」や第8回国展「ピクニツク」などがあり、突きこんだ異色ある人物画...

「河野通勢」『日本美術年鑑』昭和22~26年版(142頁)

Wikipedia

Kohno Michisei (sometimes transliterated as Kono Michisei; also known as Kono Petoru Tsusei) (June 10, 1895 – March 31, 1950) was a Japanese painter, illustrator, and printmaker known for his association with the yōga movement of the early 20th century. His work is considered representative of the Taishō period in Japanese art.Michisei was born in Isezaki, Gunma Prefecture, the son of Kohno Jiro, a painter, teacher of art and portrait photographer who was also a member of the Japanese Orthodox Church; some sources state that he grew up in Nagano City. The elder Kohno also had an extensive library, which provided further inspiration for his son. Michisei soon fell under the influence of painter Kishida Ryūsei, and joined the latter's Sodosha movement in 1915; he also exhibited at times with Kokugakai, Nikakai, Shun'yokai, and Bunten. After Kishida's death Kohno turned increasingly to illustration, producing artwork for a number of novels published during the Shōwa period and working for a variety of newspapers. Beginning in 1931 he was a member of Nihon Hanga Kyokai, and he exhibited his paintings sporadically between 1933 and 1937. Among the subjects he illustrated was the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. He also produced woodblock prints during his career, and served as art director for one film directed by Kazunobu Shigemune for Toho Studios, Matsushita mura juku, in 1939. Sekine Shoji was influenced by his work.Stylistically, perhaps Kohno's greatest influence was the work of Albrecht Dürer, which he knew, as did most of his Japanese artistic contemporaries, primarily from books and magazines; indeed, the pose, color scheme, costume, and background of his Self-Portrait of 1917 indicate his familiarity with the German master's Self Portrait at Twenty-Eight Years Old Wearing a Coat with Fur Collar of 1500. The work of Michelangelo, too, provided much of Kohno's inspiration, as did the Christian faith. He repeatedly touched upon Christian themes in his work, blending them with unorthodox elements; for instance, he depicted Adam and Eve crossing the river Susobana upon their expulsion from the Garden of Eden, and painted the Virgin Mary nude at the center of his painting of the Nativity. Kohno also showed some interest in self-portraiture, returning to the medium numerous times throughout his career.Kohno died in Koganei, Tokyo prefecture, in 1950, and was soon forgotten; he was, however, the subject of a 2008 retrospective at the Hiratsuka Museum of Art in Tokyo, which traveled to the Ashikaga Museum of Art, the Shoto Museum of Art, and a museum in Nagano Prefecture. Two of his paintings, a self-portrait and a portrait of his son Shuntatsu, are currently in the collection of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery in Washington, D.C.; his work may also be seen in numerous museums in Japan, including the Hiratsuka Museum of Art, the Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art and the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo. A drawing is owned by the Museum of Modern Art, Kamakura & Hayama.
Information from Wikipedia, made available under theCreative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

VIAF ID
9720273
AKL ID
43000109
NDL ID
00256104
Wikidata ID
Q6426117

2023-02-20