TAKEUCHI SEIHO (1864-1942)

Details
TAKEUCHI SEIHO (1864-1942)

Shishi (lion)

Signed Seiho with two seals--ink and color on silk, mounted as a hanging scroll
43 3/4 x 16in. (111 x 41cm.)

Two wood storage boxes, the inner box titled Shishi, signed Seiho dai and sealed Sei

Lot Essay

Takeuchi Seiho was a child of Kyoto and pursued his career there, becoming perhaps that city's best known modern painter. In Kyoto the Maruyama-Shijo schools of painting were the dominant legacy from the Edo period, and Seiho's initial training began in 1881 with Shijo school painter Kono Bairei (1844-1895). In 1882 Seiho began to compete in government sponsored competitive exhibitions, through which he made a name and began his rise to the top of the Kyoto art world. He also sent his paintings to the competitive exhibitions held by the Japan Art Institute, the Inten. Seiho spent 1900-1901 studying painting in Europe, where he was particularly impressed with the works of Corot and Turner. In 1920-1921 Seiho traveled to China. He taught many of Kyoto's successive generations of modern painters in his own studio, and as a teacher at the Kyoto Municipal High School of Arts and Crafts and the Kyoto Municipal College of Painting. In addition, he served as a judge for several of the competitive exhibitions including Bunten and Teiten, he supported the Japan Art Institute in some of its conflicts with the Ministry of Education, he was elected a Court Artist in 1913, and was among the first to be awarded the Order of Cultural Merit in 1937.

In the development of Seiho's painting, the trip to England marked a turning point. Seiho went from working in relatively traditional styles, especially Maruyama-Shijo, to greater experimentation with the use of shaded color to achieve two different sorts of effects. Some works, such as the one offered here, demonstrate how Seiho used shading and careful draughtsmanship to enhance the sense of realistic description already inherent to the naturalism of Maruyama school painting.