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  1. Matsuo Bashō (松尾 芭蕉, 1644 – November 28, 1694); [ 2 ] born Matsuo Kinsaku (松尾 金作), later known as Matsuo Chūemon Munefusa (松尾 忠右衛門 宗房) [ 3 ] was the most famous Japanese poet of the Edo period. During his lifetime, Bashō was recognized for his works in the collaborative haikai no renga form; today, after ...

  2. Physical Dimensions: h 92.70, w 31.40 cm. Type: Hanging scroll. Original Source: Fukuda Art Museum, Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan. Medium: color on silk. Art Genre: Japanese Paintings. Art Form: painting. Support: silk. This portrait and haiku of Matsuo Basho was painted by Yosa Buson, who admired Basho. Basho is wearing a hood and a ink-dyed robe ...

  3. Basho Matsuo (1644 ~ 1694) Basho Matsuo is known as the first great poet in the history of haikai (and haiku). He too, wrote poems using jokes and plays upon words in his early stages, as they were in fashion, but began to attach importance to the role of thought in haikai (especially in hokku) from around 1680.

    • Who painted Matsuo Basho?1
    • Who painted Matsuo Basho?2
    • Who painted Matsuo Basho?3
    • Who painted Matsuo Basho?4
    • Who painted Matsuo Basho?5
  4. Sep 8, 2023 · The Life of Matsuo Basho . Matsuo Basho was a man of the early Edo period who perfected the art of haikai, from which haiku is derived. His name “Basho” was his haiku pen name he made around 1680, and his real name was Munefusa Matsuo. He was born in 1644 into a farming family in Iga Province (present-day Mie Prefecture).

  5. Feb 21, 2014 · February 21, 2014. The Haiga: Haiku, Calligraphy, and Painting - "Submit to nature, return to nature," wrote the seventeenth-century Japanese poet Matsuo Basho, thus capturing the beauty and simplicity of the haiku—a seventeen-syllable poem traditionally depicting a fleeting moment of a given season. The same can be said of the haiku’s more ...

  6. The 15th-century poet Matsuo Basho is still considered Japan’s greatest master of the haiku poem, a short, 17-syllable verse form that relates some aspect of nature to the human experience. Although he was one of the most celebrated men of his day, he pursued a simple life of self-imposed poverty and solitude.

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  8. Nov. 28, 1694, Ōsaka (aged 50) Bashō (born 1644, Ueno, Iga province, Japan—died Nov. 28, 1694, Ōsaka) was the supreme Japanese haiku poet, who greatly enriched the 17-syllable haiku form and made it an accepted medium of artistic expression. Bashō Bashō, statue in Tateishi, Japan. Interested in haiku from an early age, Bashō at first ...

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