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kakemono Meaning in Bengali



 একধরণর জাপানী ছবি,

একটি জাপানি (কাগজে বা সিল্ক

Noun:

একধরণর জাপানী ছবি,





kakemono's Usage Examples:

A kakemono (掛物, "hanging thing"), more commonly referred to as a kakejiku (掛軸, "hung scroll"), is a Japanese hanging scroll used to display and exhibit.


They probably served as cheap alternatives to hanging scrolls (kakemono) which were typically made of silk.


Tiger in the Snow is a hanging scroll (kakemono) painted by Japanese ukiyo-e artist Hokusai in 1849.


chabana will share the tokonoma space with the kakemono, but depending on the circumstances the kakemono might be up in the tokonoma when the guests first.


The pictures are often on scrolls that can be hung on a wall (kakemono), handscrolls (emakimono) that are read from right to left, or on a folding.


This period also saw Masanobu produce large kakemono-sized portraits of courtesans, whose designs had a warmth and humanity.


The earliest signed kakemono-e, circa the late 1680s, is attributed to Sugimura.


He used the format called kakemono, with a narrow vertical canvas.


Initially, nihonga were produced for hanging scrolls (kakemono), hand scrolls (emakimono), sliding doors (fusuma) or folding screens (byōbu).


Shunga was also produced in hand scroll format, called kakemono-e (掛け物絵).


Nanpo made calligrphies (calligraphy) mainly in the tanzaku and kakemono format.


They are mounted as kakejiku or kakemono, vertical hanging scrolls.


(すごろく) with his signature that still exist and at least three prints in the kakemono-e format were produced in his latter years.


Landscape moribana arrangement by the Ohara-ryū in a tokonoma alcove in front of a scroll painting (kakemono).



kakemono's Meaning':

a Japanese (paper or silk

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