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zengetsuyou rakan@‘TŒŽ—l—…ŠΏ
KEY WORD :@art history / iconography
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Ch: chanyueyang luohan. A type of ink painting of arhats or *rakan —…ŠΏ associated with by the Chinese priest Guanxiu (Jp: Kankyuu ŠΡ‹x, 832-912) that features exaggerated, grotesque figures. According to the Yizhou Minhualu (Jp: EKISHUU MEIGAROKU ‰vB–Ό‰ζ˜^, 1006), Guanxiu, also known as Chanyue Dashi (Jp: Zengetsu Daishi ‘TŒŽ‘εŽt), had a dream in which he saw strange images of the sixteen arhats *juuroku rakan \˜Z—…ŠΏ. Upon waking, he made an ink painting of the figures, recording them as grotesquely distorted figures with bulging facial features and copious body hair. This manner came to be known as the Zengetsu style and was widely imitated to the point of becoming one of the major modes of rakan painting in China and Japan. Notable examples in Japan are hanging scroll sets of the Juuroku Rakan at Koudaiji ‚‘δŽ› in Kyoto; the Nezu ͺ’Γ Museum in Tokyo; and Fujita “‘“c Museum in Osaka.
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission.
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