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Kanō Michinobu (, 20 December 1730 – 24 September 1790) was a Japanese painter of the Kanō school of painting. He was the first appointed "inner painter" to the shogun, to whom he remained close. Michinobu also used the art names Eisen (), Eisen'in (), and Hakugyokusai (). ==Life and career== Michinobu was born with the given name Shōzaburō () on the 11th day of the 11th month or the year Kyōhō (20 December 1730) in Edo (modern Tokyo). He was the first son of the Kanō school painter Eisen Hisanobu (, 1698–1731), who had taken over as head of the school from Kanō Tsunenobu in 1728 and who died in 1731, the year after Michinobu's birth. Jusen Harunobu () was adopted into the family to carry on the line, but also fell sick and died in 1731 at age 17, and Michinobu was thus officially named to carry on the line. As he was still an infant, he did not have an audience with the Shogun whom he was to serve until 1741. Michinobu was prolific and ambitious and came to dominate the Kanō school. In the face of the rising popularity of popular art of the Nanpin school Michinobu strove to revive the Kanō school's fading status and re-introduced the the bold brush strokes of the school's Chinese-inspired roots. He won the deep favour of the shogun Tokugawa Ieharu (1737–86), to whom he remained close and who had Michinobu moved from his workshop in Takegawa to a mansion in Kobikichō in central Edo. The branch flourished and Michinobu instructed large numbers of students. Under Ieharu's influence the Kobikichō branch replaced the Nakabishi branch as the dominant branch of the Kanō school. In 1762 Michinobu the rank of ''hōgen''—the second highest rank for Buddhist priests—was conferred on him. In 1763 he was made an "inner painter" ( ''oku-goyō eshi''), a title Ieharu had created that year for painters appointed to paint the shogun's inner chambers, and which gave the painter freedom to roam these chambers and personal access tot he shogun. Michinobu lost influence after the death of Ieharu in 1786; the next shogun Ienari's senior councillor Matsudaira Sadanobu described him as "an adept painter and remarkably proficient at securing the patronage of important persons", and favoured other outside painters. On Michinobu's death in 1790 his son (1753–1808) succeeded as the head of the Kanō school. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kanō Michinobu」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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