Hanga
Fugenji Temple Kannon, Tanabe Tokyo by Tomikichiro Tokuriki — Japanese Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)

Fugenji Temple Kannon, Tanabe Tokyo

by Tomikichiro Tokuriki

Medium:
Mokuhanga (Japanese woodblock)
Image courtesy of
Saru Gallery

Description

Fugenji is a Buddhist temple, and the Kannon named in the title refers to the bodhisattva of compassion, typically depicted as a serene seated or standing figure with a willow branch and water vessel. The print likely centers on the sculpted Kannon image within the temple precinct, framed by gates, lanterns, or surrounding pine. Tokuriki's religious subjects connect directly to his family heritage as twelfth-generation print artists for Honganji Temple in Kyoto, a lineage that grounded his early formation in Buddhist iconography and devotional imagery. The rendering would likely employ subdued color — earth pigments, sumi black for the keyblock outline, and selective bokashi to suggest incense haze or dim hall light — holding the figure's countenance as the focal weight. Such temple-and-deity prints occupy a discrete strand within his prolific output, distinct from the secular landscapes of Kyoto and the Mount Fuji series for which he is more widely known.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Fugenji Temple Kannon, Tanabe Tokyo was created by Tomikichiro Tokuriki (徳力富吉郎).

Fugenji Temple Kannon, Tanabe Tokyo depicts temples & shrines and religious.