Tawaraya Sotatsu (c1600 - 1643). Tawaraya Sotatsu was a Japanese painter and designer of the Rinpa school. Sōtatsu is best known for his decorations of calligraphic works by his partner Hon'ami Koetsu, and his spectacular and highly influential byobu folding screens, such as National Treasures Wind God and Thunder God and his painting of the Sekiya and Miotsukushi chapters from The Tale of Genji. He also popularized a technique called tarashikomi, in which a second layer of paint is applied before the first layer is dry. He is also credited with co-founding the Rinpa school of Japanese painting, together with Koetsu. Rinpa was not strictly a school, but a group of artist directly influenced by Sotatsu and Koetsu. Some of the most notable Rinpa artists are Ogata Korin, Ogata Kenzan and Sakai Hoitsu. The exact date of Sotatsu's birth, probably around 1570, remains unknown, and so does the place of his birth. The painter Tani Buncho stated that Sotatsu was originally from Noto and that he studied under Sumiyoshi Jokei in Kyoto. His family name may have been Nonomura. In 1602 he was hired by the Taira family to repair the 12th-century sutra scrolls Heike nokyo at the Itsukushima shrine on Miyajima. This is the earliest paintings attributed to Sotatsu, but it already features the characteristics of his later work. It is suspected that Koetsu might have also worked in the repair of the scroll. The first confirmed collaboration with Hon'ami Koetsu is in the Sagabon, an ambitious project started around 1606 by Suminokura Soan to publish elaborate editions of classical Japanese book and Noh librettos. Sotatsu created the designs for the covers and paper of many of the books, while Koetsu was the calligrapher of some of the texts. The name Sagabon comes from the suburb of Kyoto where the book were produced. Sotatsu married a cousin of Koetsu. He also opened a shop in Kyoto, named Tawaraya, where he sold a variety of decorated objects, including fans, lantern paper, screens, dolls and patterns for kimonos, and also took commissions for decorating interiors. The shop soon gained recognition for its artistic excellence. The collaboration between Sotatsu and Koetsu came to an end around 1620, perhaps because he was moving away from the profession of decorator and designer, and started focusing more on his career as a painter. He decorated the doors and screens of the Yogen-in temple during the reconstruction ordered by Tokugawa Hidetada's wife in 1621, and in 1630 he was given the title of hokkyo, the third highest rank awarded to Buddhist artists. The circumstances of Sotatsu's death are not known, but he probably died around 1640. The most successful among his direct students were Tawaraya Sosetsu and Kitawaga Sosetsu. Anthology with Cranes is a handscroll decorated by Sotatsu using silver and gold pigment, with calligraphy by Hon'ami Koetsu. It contains some of the finest calligraphy by Koetsu and one of the best examples of Sotatsu's decorative skills. The work was most likely produced between 1602 and 1620, the period during which Sotatsu and Koetsu are generally considered to have worked together. The text of the scroll is a compilation of waka poems from the poets known collectively as Thirty-Six Immortals of Poetry, including one poem from each one of the 36 members of the group. The visual motif is that of cranes, which stand or fly in flocks across the entire length of the scroll. The skill of Sotatsu's design and its cutting-edge originality have been highly praised. The scroll measures 34.1 cm x 1356 cm and belongs to the Kyoto National Museum. It is an Important Cultural Property. Wind God and Thunder God is a pair of two-folded screens made using ink and color on gold-foiled paper. It depicts Raijin, the god of lightning, thunder and storms in the Shinto religion and in Japanese mythology, and Fūjin, the god of wind. The screens have no inscription or seal, but its attribution to Tawaraya Sotatsu is not questioned. It is a particularly prominent work in the Rinpa school because two other of its major figures, Ogata Korin and Sakai Hoitsu, replicated the painting in homage. All three versions of the work were displayed together for the first time in seventy-five years in 2015, at the Kyoto National Museum exhibition Rinpa: The Aesthetics of the Capital. Each screen measures 169.8 cm × 154.5 cm. They belong to the Zen Buddhist temple Kennin-ji in Kyoto, but they are exhibited occasionally in the Kyoto National Museum. They are a National Treasure of Japan.
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