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Kengetsudō: The Silent Beauty of the Kaigetsudō School Kengetsudō, a figure shrouded in the mists of Japanese art history, remains an enigmatic yet profoundly influential Ukiyo-e painter from Edo-period Tokyo. Little is definitively known about his life – his birthdate and even his given name are subjects of scholarly debate – yet his legacy endures through the distinctive “Kaigetsudō style,” a school he founded that produced some of the most captivating portraits of women in Japanese art. His work, primarily hand-painted hanging scrolls rather than the mass-produced woodblock prints common…
A chart of kengetsudō's corpus mapped not by date but by subject. Spokes are what they painted; rings are when; and the threads between stars reveal the patrons and places that secretly connect them.
Each arm of the atlas gathers works by what they depict: portraits, sacred scenes, mythologies, and the scientific studies. Click a spoke to swing that cluster to the top.
Distance from the center marks time. The innermost ring is the earliest period; the outermost, the final years. Style matures as you move outward.
Coloured lines link works bound by the same patron, commission, or theme. Trace a context to watch related clusters light up across subjects.
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