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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Rui Yoshida (1864-1954) was a daughter born to a family of Japanese artists five generations ago. Through those five generations, the Yoshida artists evolved from using a traditional Japanese style to producing modern Western-style art, and finally to post-modernism. Although not an artist herself, Rui was the key figure who nurtured and shaped those who did become artists. She exemplifies a woman's decisive influence within traditional Japanese patriarchal structures and values. When Rui was born in the mid-1800s, the Yoshida family was making…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Rui Yoshida (1864-1954) was a daughter born to a family of Japanese artists five generations ago. Through those five generations, the Yoshida artists evolved from using a traditional Japanese style to producing modern Western-style art, and finally to post-modernism. Although not an artist herself, Rui was the key figure who nurtured and shaped those who did become artists. She exemplifies a woman's decisive influence within traditional Japanese patriarchal structures and values. When Rui was born in the mid-1800s, the Yoshida family was making traditional paintings for the Nakatsu warrior clan in what is now ita Prefecture on the island of Ky sh . However, no males were born into the family to carry on the Yoshida name and work. As was often done in Japan at the time, a family without a male heir would adopt a male from another family. Rui's parents selected a young man, Kasabur Haruno (1861-1894), whose father was also a painter for the Nakatsu clan, to be their adopted son and to marry Rui. Kasabur had been trained by early Western-style artists in Kyoto in their use of sketch, watercolors, and oils.