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Tensho Shubun [Ekkei]
( fl c. 141863). Japanese Zen monk and ink painter. Shubun served as the official painter to the shogunate during the Muromachi period (13331568) at Shokokuji, one of the gozan (five mountains) hierarchy of Zen temples in Kyoto, which were both cultural centres and adjuncts to shogunal control (Shokokuji was the temple most intimately associated with the shogun). Shubun worked principally under the Ashikaga shoguns Yoshimochi (13861428), Yoshinori (13941441) and Yoshimasa (143690), avid patrons of the arts; he held concurrently the administrative position of tsukan (comptroller of the budget). Shubun is known principally for his monochromatic ink paintings (suibokuga) modelled after Southern Song Chinese (11271279) painting, but his duties reputedly also included Buddhist iconic painting and sculpture. Shubuns name first appears in Korean records of a Japanese diplomatic mission sent to Korea by the shogunate in 1423 to obtain copies of Buddhist texts. However, he is known more for the illustrious and stylistically distinctive ink landscape painting school associated with his name than as a historical individual.
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