Korin$504521$ - meaning and definition. What is Korin$504521$
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What (who) is Korin$504521$ - definition

JAPANESE VISUAL ARTIST (1658-1716)
Korin Ogata; Ogata Korin

Furuya Kōrin         
JAPANESE DESIGNER AND PAINTER
Draft:Furuya Korin; Furuya Korin; Kōrin Furuya; Furutani Kōrin
Furuya Kōrin (Kōrin Furuya, Furutani Kōrin, 1875–1910) was a Japanese artist, illustrator, and designer active in the Kyoto arts and crafts circle in the Meiji period of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.Carpenter, pp.
Korin         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Korin (disambiguation)
·noun The Gazelle.
Yamada Kōrin         
JAPANESE DOCTOR (1869-1955)
Yamada Korin
, whose first name is also glossed as Hirotomo, was a Japanese doctor involved in the promotion of hygiene and dermatology. He co-authored a popular handbook on cutaneous disease.

Wikipedia

Ogata Kōrin

Ogata Kōrin (Japanese: 尾形光琳; 1658 – June 2, 1716) was a Japanese landscape illustrator, lacquerer, painter, and textile designer of the Rinpa School.

Kōrin is best known for his byōbu folding screens, such as Irises and Red and White Plum Blossoms (both registered National Treasures), and his paintings on ceramics and lacquerware produced by his brother Kenzan (1663–1743). Also a prolific designer, he worked with a variety of decorative and practical objects, such as round fans, makie writing boxes or inrō medicine cases.

He is also credited with reviving and consolidating the Rinpa school of Japanese painting, fifty years after its foundation by Hon'ami Kōetsu (1558–1637) and Tawaraya Sōtatsu (c. 1570 – c. 1640). In fact the term "Rinpa", coined in the Meiji period, means "school of [Kō]rin". In particular he had a lasting influence on Sakai Hōitsu (1761–1828), who replicated many of his paintings and popularized his work, organizing the first exhibition of Kōrin's paintings at the hundredth anniversary of his death.