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Enpa@‰~”h
KEY WORD :@art history / sculptures
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A Buddhist sculpture school *bussho •§Š, active in Kyoto from the 11c onward. The name Enpa is derived from the frequent use of the character ‰~ 'En' in sculptors' names. Enpa and *Inpa ‰@”h, Kyoto's other major guild of Buddhist sculptors *busshi •§Žt, are collectively known as *kyoto busshi ‹ž“s•§Žt. Enpa's principal workshop *sanjou bussho ŽOπ•§Š, was established in Sanjou, probably in the late 12c, and the term sanjou bussho was sometimes used later to refer to the Enpa generally. The Enpa was founded by Jouchou's ’θ’© (?-1057) pupil Chousei ’·¨ (1010-91), and was continued by his descendants and disciples, including Ensei ‰~¨ (?-1134), Chouen ’·‰~ (?-1150), Ken-en Œ«‰~ (active mid -late 12c), Myouen –Ύ‰~ (H-1199), and Kyouen Œo‰~ (active early-13c). During the Heian period the Enpa were supported by the Kyoto imperial family, nobility and temples, and in the 12c they were the dominant school in Japanese Buddhist statuary. They used a gentle, refined style, closely based on Jouchou's (see *Jouchouyou ’θ’©—l). Good examples include: Nikkou Gakkou Bosatsuzou “ϊŒυ₯ŒŽŒυ•μŽF‘œ (1064) and Juuni Shinshouzou \“ρ_«‘œ (1064) in Kouryuuji L—²Ž› (Kyoto) by Chousei; Godai Myououzou Œά‘ε–Ύ‰€‘œ (1176-77) in Daikakuji ‘εŠoŽ› (Kyoto) by Myouen; and Amida Nyoraizou ˆ’–ν‘Ι”@—ˆ‘œ (1222) in Kongourinji ‹ΰ„—ΦŽ› (Shiga prefecture) by Kyouen. In the 13-14c the Nara based school *Keiha Œc”h, sponsored by the Kamakura government, became more powerful than the Kyoto schools. However, the Enpa continued production, and there was considerable intermixing and collaboration between the schools. Between 1251 and 1266, Ryuuen —²‰~ and other Enpa sculptors worked together with Inpa and Keiha artists on Sentai Senju Kannonzou η‘̐ηŽθŠΟ‰Ή‘œ in Rengeouin ˜@‰Ψ‰€‰@ (Kyoto, Sanjuusangendou ŽO\ŽOŠΤ“°). Enpa sculptors also set up workshops in regional centres outside Kyoto, as for example in Fukushima and Kamakura. In the Muromachi period workshops were further fragmented, but the Enpa style continued to exert an influence on sculpture of the period.
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