ArtistsHanabusa Itcho
Hanabusa Itcho

Hanabusa Itcho

Artist
Painting
Representation
None documented
0
Institutional Exhibitions
2
Works in Collection
29
Assets Indexed
6
Authority-backed Facts
0
Publications Referenced
70%
Profile Completeness

Cultural Positioning

Movements
No movements recorded
Related Artists
No edges recorded
Influence Graph
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About

Why this artist matters now

Hanabusa Itcho was an Edo-period Japanese painter, calligrapher, and haiku poet whose work represents a deliberate break from institutional orthodoxy. Trained under Kano Yasunobu in the rigorous Kano school tradition, he ultimately rejected that lineage to pursue the more individualistic path of the literati, or bunjin, painter. This rejection shaped the character of his output, which fused poetic sensibility with painterly practice across multiple disciplines. He worked under several art-names, including Hishikawa Wao, reflecting the fluid self-fashioning typical of bunjin culture.

Source: Museum · Trust score: 100% · Updated 2mo ago

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Movement
Medium
Painting
Related Artists
6 in graph
Institutional

Museum Collections

Canonical record

Artworks (2)

Record

Images

27 assets
Sketch of a Priest (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
Sketch of a Priest (Art Institute of Chicago)
Art Institute of Chicago
MET 29 82 7 O7
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
MET 29 82 7 O3
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
MET 29 82 7 O2
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
MET 29 82 7 d3
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
MET 29 82 7 O1
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
MET 29 82 7 d2
Wikimedia Commons (Instagram fallback)
View all 27 media items →
Record

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Institutional

Representation & Collections

In collection
Art Institute of Chicago
Record

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