Ike
Taiga
Ike no Taiga: Bridging Tradition and Innovation in Edo Period Landscape Painting Ike no Taiga (1723-1776) stands as a monumental figure within the *bunjinga* tradition—a uniquely Japanese form of literati painting that flourished during the Edo period. More than just an artist, he embodied the …
A portrait built from Ike Taiga's own colours
Every 12 approved work contributes its dominant tone to a single flowing field. Sorted along the hue wheel, the strip reads as a smooth spectrum. Click any band to reveal its full four-colour palette.
Bands follow the hue wheel; visually identical tones are merged.
Every painting, placed on the hue wheel
Each dot is a work — its angle set by hue, its distance from the centre by saturation. Hover a dot to see the painting.
The signature, in numbers
Where the colour came from
Up to 24 paintings representing the most frequent palette tones — each shown with its dominant colours.