Sakai Hoitsu. Sakai Hoitsu was a Japanese painter of the Rinpa school.
   He is known for having revived the style and popularity of Ogata Korin, and for having created a number of reproductions of Korin's work. Sakai Hoitsu was born on 1 August 1761 in Edo.
   His father was the lord of Himeji Castle in Harima Province. The Sakai daimyo clan originated in Mikawa Province.
   They claim descent from Minamoto no Arichika. Arichika had two sons: one of them, Yasuchika, took the name of Matsudaira; and the other son, Chikauji, took the name of Sakai, and this is the ancestor of the Sakai clan.
   Sakai Hirochika, the son of Chikauji, had two sons as well; and the descendants of these two sons gave rise to the two principal branches of the clan. A cadet branch of the Sakai is composed of the descendants of Sakai Masachika, who was a vassal of the Tokugawa – Nobutada, Kiyoyasu et Hirotada. In 1561, Masachika was installed at Nishio Castle in Mikawa province, and the security of the castle was confided in him. In 1590, Sakai Shigetada, the son of Masachika, received the domain of Kawagoe in Musashi Province; then in 1601, he was installed at Umayabashi in Kozuke province. In 1749, Sakai Tadakiyo and his descendants were transferred to Himeji in Harima Province; and they remained daimyo at Himeji until the Meiji period. Moving to Kyoto, Hoitsu began his studies in art in the Kano school before moving on to s
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