Kanō Kazunobu


Kanō Kazunobu was a Japanese painter of the Kanō school.
Kazunobu produced mainly Buddhist paintings and he is best known for his highly acclaimed Five Hundred Arhats. Some of his other surviving works are housed at the Senso-ji temple in Asakusa and the Shinshō-ji temple in Narita.
He did not use the surname Kanō during his life, but rather signed with his wife's surname as Henmi Kazunobu or with the art name Ken'yūsai Kazunobu.

Works

Five Hundred Arhats is a set of 100 hanging scrolls created between 1854 and 1863, the year Kazunobu's death. The work depicts scenes from the lives of the arhats, the five hundred disciples of the Buddha. It is widely considered one of the most important religious paintings from the Edo period, variously praised by its "unique style" and "strong characters in thick colors" and its "visually disturbing, original interpretation of the subject".
It was commissioned by the Zōjō-ji temple in Edo, the Tokugawa-sponsored main temple of the Jōdo-shū buddhist sect, to which it now belong.
Kazunobu's Five Hundred Arhats was mostly overlooked through the twentieth century but it has attracted attention in recent years, with an exhibition of 2 of the scrolls in 2006 at the Tokyo National Museum, and the first ever exhibition of the complete set in 2011 at the Edo-Tokyo Museum. As of 2017, a changing set of 10 scrolls is displayed in the Zōjō-ji Treasure Gallery.
A second set of 50 scrolls of Five Hundred Arhats is owned by the Tokyo National Museum. Perhaps a test for the final version, each scroll is about a quarter of the size of the Zōjō-ji version, and it includes two scenes instead of one. The work was exhibited in its entirety in 2006.