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Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote

Animals sumo wrestling on the first scroll of Chōjū-giga
Creature taken from Bakemono-zukushi

Template:Nihongo (1053–1140), also known as Template:Nihongo in his priesthood, was a Japanese artist-monk, and the son of Minamoto no Takakuni.

Biography

Kakuyū was a high priest of Tendai Buddhism. He was advanced to Template:Nihongo in 1132 and then Template:Nihongo in 1134. In 1138, he became the 48th Template:Nihongo (the chief of the Tendai school). He is commonly known as Toba Sōjō, because he lived in Template:Nihongo, a temple funded by the imperial family and located at Toba, Kyoto.

As an artist

Kakuyū was also an artist proficient in both Buddhist art and satirical cartoon and his work (confirmed to be authentic) includes Fudōmyō'ō-ritsuzō at Daigo-ji, an Important Cultural Property of Japan.[1] Perhaps the most famous one is the picture scroll Chōjū-giga, a National Treasure of Japan and one of the earliest manga—however, this attribution has no proof and may be spurious.[1]

His works are held in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art[2] and the University of Michigan Museum of Art.[3]

References

Template:Authority control


Template:Japan-bio-stub