Category
page 113th-century sculptors
Unkei
was a Japanese sculptor of the Kei school, which flourished in the Kamakura period. He specialized in statues of the Buddha and other important Buddhist figures. Unkei's early works are fairly traditional, similar in style to pieces by his father, Kōkei. However, the sculptures he produced for the Tōdai-ji in Nara show a flair for realism different from anything Japan had seen before. Today, Unkei is the best known of the Kei artists, and many art historians consider him its "most distinguished member".

Kaikei
thumb|right|200px|Kaikei, wood-colored Buddha
thumb|right|200px|Kaikei, wooden bodhisattva statue with lacquer, gold, copper, and crystal
Sabina von Steinbach
German sculptor
Master Sigraf
thumb|Baptismal font attributed to Master Sigraf in Grötlingbo church, [[Gotland (Sweden).]]
Sigraf (also Sighraf, Sighrafr, fl. c.1175–1210) was a Romanesque stone sculptor, working on Gotland. He was mainly active as a sculptor of baptismal fonts, but also of reliquaries, carved pillars and reliefs. He was the most productive of several early medieval stone sculptors making baptismal fonts on Gotland.