Nanman Screen - Kobe City Museum
It is a type of screen made in Japan from the late 16th century to the mid-17th century, mainly depicting scenes of communication with Portugal and Spain. This important cultural property created by Kano Uchiyama uses the technique of coloring gold on paper and consists of six pieces. It is currently collected at the Kobe City Museum. The creative background is closely related to Japan's foreign exchanges at that time. In the late 16th century, with the colonial expansion of Portugal and Spain in Asia, Western European countries began to enter Japan's trading circle, and the Japanese at that time referred to them as the "Southern Barbarians". From this work, we can see how Japanese people at that time understood and expressed their communication and interaction with foreign countries through art.
Popular Models
Random Model
Aluminum alloy tool storage box
471 View
Green curtain stone amphibolite
1002 View
Chinese astilbe
671 View
Panasonic NV-GS5EN DV Camera
707 View
Eggplant
305 View
3D model of shovel
984 View
drip guanyin potted plant
681 View
3D action model of Shuangjilong
981 View