SÅtatsu is a beautifully designed volume celebrating the influential early seventeenth-century Japanese painter Tawaraya SÅtatsu. This book, the first Western survey of this important artist, accompanies the Smithsonian's Arthur M. Sackler Gallery exhibition of the same name.
Tawaraya SÅtatsu was a commoner who introduced traditional Japanese themes and subjects, formerly the sole purview of the aristocracy, to broader audiences. He painted these nationalistic images using a bold, expressive new design style. This characteristic style was further developed and enhanced when he founded the historic Rinpa school with calligrapher Hon'ami KÅetsu; Rinpa works are marked by dramatic, stylized renderings of traditional Japanese themes. Essays by leading scholars from the United States and Japan focus on SÅtatsu's well-known works; his collaboration with KÅetsu; his varied roles as shopkeeper, compiler, and court painter; and his influence over other artists, including Ogata KÅrin, Ogata Kenzan, Sakai HÅitsu, and Suzuki Kiitsu. The book also examines Freer Gallery of Art founder Charles Lang Freer's role in introducing SÅtatsu and KÅetsu to the Western world. SÅtatsu is a must-have book for museumgoers, Japanophiles, art lovers, and scholars.