Category
page 2Buddhist artists
Wu Bin
Chinese painter (1573-1620)
Kun Can
Chinese painter (1612-1674)
Hongren
Chinese artist (1610-1663)

Yuki Ogura
Japanese artist (1895-2000)
Choying Dorje
Tibetan Karmapa (1604-1674), artist
Kokei Kobayashi
Japanese painter (1883-1957)
Wuzhun Shifan
Zen master (1177-1249)

Xue Susu
Chinese prostitute, poet, artist, mounted archer, and Buddhist nun (c. 1564-1650)
Kawabata Ryushi
Japanese painter (1885-1966)
Aizu Yaichi
Japanese poet, calligrapher, historian (1881–1956)
Chalermchai Kositpipat
Thai artist
Juran
Chinese painter
Murakami Kagaku
Japanese artist (1888-1939)
Zhang Huan
Chinese visual artist, b. 1965 (born 1965)
Shikō Munakata
Japanese artist (1903-1975)
Kaii Higashiyama
Japanese artist (1908-1999)
Takamura Kōun
Japanese sculptor (1852–1934)
Zhang Sengyou
Liang dynasty painter
Matazō Kayama
Japanese artist (1927-2004)
Li Gotami Govinda
Indian painter (1906-1988)
Ikuo Hirayama
Japanese artist (1930-2009)
Kanzan Shimomura
Japanese painter (1873-1930)
Kawahara Keiga
Japanese painter
Ding Yunpeng
Chinese artist (1547-1628)
Dulduityn Danzanravjaa
Mongolian poet and musician (1803–1853)
Yukihiko Yasuda
Japanese painter (1884-1978)
Xu Gu
Chinese painter and poet (1824-1896)

Jin Goto
Japanese artist
Utagawa Kunisada II
Japanese artist (1823-1880)
Unkoku Tōgan
Japanese painter (1547-1618)

Guan Xiu
thumb|Guan Xiu's Temple in Youbu, Lanxi, Zhejiang
Guanxiu () was a celebrated Buddhist monk, painter, poet, and calligrapher. His greatest works date from the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. The collapse of the central Tang government in 907, meant artists and craftsmen lost their most powerful patrons. The imperial Tang court had inspired a golden age of literature and art at its apogee. The various provincial courts who claimed to represent a continuation of the tradition of Tang government also claimed continuity in the arts and culture. The state of the Former Shu had acted as the
Wang Zhen
Qing Dynasty painter (1867-1938)
Sonam Dolma Brauen
Tibetan-Swiss painter and sculptor
Frederick Franck
Dutch painter (1909-2006)
Shao Mi
Chinese artist (1592-1642)
Atasi Barua
Indian painter of the 20th century.
Situ Panchen
Tibetan lama and painter (1700-1774)
Suzanne Karpelès
French Indologist, linguist
Yan Hui
Chinese painter

Zhang Shengwen
Hasegawa Settan
Japanese artist (1778-1843)
Kim Myeong-guk
Korean painter (1600-1662)
Song Xu
Ming Dynasty painter (1525-1625)
Inshō Dōmoto
Japanese artist (1891-1975)
Jeff Banks
British fashion designer
Nōami
was a dōbōshū (artist and art connoisseur for the shogunate) in the service of the Ashikaga shogunate, an esteemed suiboku (monochrome ink) painter, renga (linked verse) poet and tate-bana flower artist. He was especially closely involved with the 6th shōgun Ashikaga Yoshinori and the 8th shōgun Ashikaga Yoshimasa. Nōami served the Ashikaga shogunate as the curator of the shogunate's collection of artworks known as the ‘Higashiyama Gomotsu’. An astute art connoisseur, Nōami collected and evaluated the imported artworks for the shogunate and developed elaborate guidelines for the display of art
Zhou Shuxi
Chinese painter (1624-1705)
Tenga Rinpoche
Tibetan lama (1932-2012)
Chang Ucchin
South Korean painter (1918-1990)
George Keyt
Sri Lankan painter (1901-1993)
Nakahara Nantenbo
Bhuddhist master and artist (1839–1925)
Obaku Dokuryu
Japanese calligrapher, scholar, monk and artist (1596-1672)
Gai Qi
Chinese artist and poet (1774-1829)
Zhou Jichang
Song Dynasty painter
Irie Hakō
Japanese painter (1887-1948)
Shinjō Itō
Japanese Buddhist teacher (1906–1989)
Lin Tinggui
painter