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The Shohaku Show explores the life and works
of the iconoclastic Edo-period painter Soga Shohaku
(1730-1781), who has long been believed to come from
the province of Ise (now Mie Prefecture). His many works
in this area even today appear to confirm this. However,
records indicate that from his father's generation the
family lived in Kyoto, where many eminent painters,
including Yosa Buson, Ike no Taiga, Maruyama Okyo, Nagasawa
Rosetsu, and Ito Jakuchu, were active. Ranking in line
with such figures, Shohaku developed his own distinctive
style by deviating from the contemporary art scene and
professing to the then outdated style of the Muromachi
(1392-1572) painter Soga Jasoku (d. 1483), undoubtedly
in an attempt to undermine the overwhelming popularity
of the realist painter Maruyama Okyo (1733-1795).
Most anecdotes on Shohaku describe
an arrogant, brazen, aggressive individual. Though an
oversimplification, his social background and a comparison
to the life of his contemporary, Ito Jakuchu (1716-1800),
may offer some insight into Shohaku's unconventional
character. The artist Jakuchu was born as the first
son of a prosperous vegetable wholesaler in the Nishikikoji
district of Kyoto and lived comfortably for most of
his life without having to worry about his livelihood.
He painted as he liked and did not have to sell his
works. Shohaku, on the other hand, was born to a wealthy
merchant family in Kyoto, which also had a branch store
in Edo (now Tokyo), however, by age seventeen, he was
without family--he lost his older brother at age eleven,
his father at age fourteen, and his mother at seventeen,
and appears to have had a younger sister, who remains
largely unknown. Such circumstances most likely influenced
the artist's works and worldview.
This prolific painter produced
many works from his youth to his prime in Ise and the
Banshu area (now southern Hyogo Prefecture), and settled
back down in Kyoto only in his forties. This retrospective
offers a look into Shohaku's world by exploring his
childhood and his road to success as a painter through
some 120 works, including paintings from collections
in the U.S., Germany, and France. Enjoy Shohaku's diverse
range and styles through his paintings that reflect
his uninhibited, wild and soft, gentle sides.
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