Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
Tan'yū's skills were honed early within the regimen of the Kano family's painting studio. His grandfather, Eitoku (1543–1590) was the Momoyama period's most sought-after painter, a champion of colorful, large-scale painting compositions who worked for several of the country's most powerful leaders. When the young Tan'yū was summoned to Edo in 1617 by the shogun to become a member of the new capital's official painting studio, few opportunities to work on similarly ambitious projects existed. Yet by the end of his career, Tan'yū had supervised the execution and installation of linked mural painting compositions in several of Japan's most prestigious residences and castles. As an official court painter to the first shogun, Tokugawa Ieyasu (reigned 1603–5), and then his successors, Tan'yū appears to have successfully juggled his official duties with private activities as a teacher, as the era's leading connoisseur of classic Chinese and Japanese painting, and as a practicing artist. His surviving compositions as well as thousands of sketches far surpass the oeuvre of any of his contemporaries. While studio assistants surely contributed to his oeuvre, just as later imitators consciousl
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Chinese Landscape
Yi Sumun (Korean, b. c. 1404) — Landscape of the Four Season
Maruyama Ōkyo (Japanese, 1733–1795) — Summer Night; Winter D
Kano Naonobu (Japanese, 1607–1650) — Summer and Winter Lands
Moonlit Landscape
Watanabe Shikō (Japanese, 1683–1755) — Eight Views of the Xi
Kano Naonobu (Japanese, 1607–1650) — Summer and Winter Lands
Unkoku Tōeki (Japanese, 1591–1644?) — Chinese Pavilions in a
Landscape
Watanabe Shikō (Japanese, 1683–1755) — Eight Views of the Xi
Kano Shōei (Japanese, 1519–1592) — The Four Accomplishments
Moonlit Landscape (one of a pair)