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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Kobori Enshū 10 found (40 total)
alternate case: kobori Enshū
Entsū-in (Matsushima)
(413 words)
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Cultural Property. The temple also has a Japanese garden attributed to Kobori Enshū . The Main Hall has a thatched hip roof and is named the Daihitei (大悲亭
List of Japanese ceramics sites
(1,064 words)
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so-called Enshū's Seven Kilns (遠州七窯, Enshū nana gama) attributed to Kobori Enshū during the Edo period, as well as the Six Ancient Kilns (六古窯, Rokkoyō)
Takatori ware
(230 words)
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which made wares following the preferences of the tea ceremony master Kobori Enshū . Andrew L Maske (2011). Potters and Patrons in Edo Period Japan: Takatori
Furuta Oribe
(354 words)
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his other particularly famous tea ceremony students were Ueda Sōko, Kobori Enshū and Hon'ami Kōetsu. The kind of tea ceremony that he established is known
Roji
(840 words)
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the sea through the trees, and the flash of the stream at my feet." Kobori Enshū was also a leading practitioner. The roji is usually divided into an
Sōkō-ji
(229 words)
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Domain. The temple garden was reconstructed in 1756 in the style of Kobori Enshū after most of the temple was destroyed in a fire. Also of note at the
Isshin-ji
(858 words)
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of Osaka Castle and became a patron of the temple after his victory. Kobori Enshū designed the temple's tea room or chashitsu in this period called Yatsu-mado
Nijō Castle
(1,544 words)
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Ninomaru garden was designed by the landscape architect and tea master Kobori Enshū . It is located between the two main rings of fortifications, next to
Japanese castle
(8,691 words)
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The Ninomaru Garden at Nijō Castle in Kyoto is attributed to Kobori Enshū .
Japanese garden
(14,149 words)
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which imitate waves. According to tradition this art was developed by Kobori Enshū (1579–1647), and it was most frequently practiced on azalea bushes. It