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| Gensou@º@ | ||||||
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|  Also 
	  known as Minghuang (Jp: Meikou Ÿc). Ch: Xuanzong (685-762). The sixth emperor 
	  of the Tang dynasty, well-known for his patronage of scholarship, religion 
	  and the arts, including his founding of the Hanlin ËÑ painting Academy in 
	  754. His love for Yang Guifei  (Jp: *Youkihi kMÜ; 
	  719-56) and the political patronage of her family, however, culminated in 
	  a rebellion in 755 led by An Lushan (Jp: An Rokusan À\R; ?-757) that forced 
	  Xuanzong and his love to flee from the capital in Changan (Jp: Chouan ·À) to the province 
	  of Shu å (or Sichuan lì).Gensou was painted by Chinese in several 
	  contexts, including official idealized portraits, didactic paintings of 
	  Good and Bad Emperors teikan-zu éÓ}, and the Journey to Shu (Ch: 
	  Minghuang Xingshu, Jp: Meikou Koushoku ŸcKå). The earliest Japanese depictions 
	  of Gensou follow Chinese illustrations of The Song of Everlasting Sorrow 
	  (Ch: Chang henge, Jp:Chougonka ·ŠÌ), a narrative ode by Bai Letian 
	  (Jp: *Haku Rakuten yV; 
	  772-846). The theme was painted in the Muromachi period, but the earliest 
	  extant examples are *Kanouha 
	  ëìh screens from the Momoyama period. In Japan, Gensou is almost always 
	  depicted with Youkihi, and by the Momoyama period the couple were 
	  often shown together with Tang courtiers in a subject called *fuuryuujin-zu 
	  ¬w}. In the Edo period *Maruyama-Shijouha 
	  ~Rlðh and *ukiyo-e 
	  ¢G artists often exploited the erotic implications of the Gensou-Youkihi	  theme.  | 
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(C)2001 Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System.@No reproduction or republication without written permission. fÚÌeLXgEÊ^ECXgÈÇASÄÌRec̳f¡»E]ÚðÖ¶Ü·B  | 
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