was the most oft-used pen name of à Âta Tan, a late Edo-period Japanese poet and fiction writer. à Âta Nanpo wrote primarily in the comedic forms of kyà Âshi, derived from comic Chinese verse, and kyà Âka, derived from waka poetry. à Âta Nanpo's pennames also include , Yomo Sanjin, Kyà Âkaen, and .
Born into a lower-status samurai family in Edo, Nanpo served the shogunate in various ways throughout his life. He began his literary career as a student of Chinese Ming-dynasty writings, and adapted traditional Chinese comic verse (called kyà Âshi in Japanese), under the mentorship of playwright Hiraga Gennai, to daily life in Edo. His first collection of work was called Neboke sensei bunshà «, or the Literary Works of Master Groggy.
Nanpo soon began to write kyà Âka, comic waka verses, as well. His popularity grew in the 1760s and 1770s, as a result of his down-to-earth subject matter and unabashed style. During this time he also wrote a number of works of popular literature, and edited a collection of comic verses called Manzai kyà Âkashà «, which truly cemented his position as a central literary figure of his time.
For political reasons, he was forced to abandon his writings for a time in the 1780s. He committed himself for several years to shogunal duties, but eventually returned to poetry.
Nanpo also collaborated with many different artists such as Hokusai, Eishi, Hokuba, Sakai HÃ Âitsu and many others. Many paintings bears his original calligraphy and poem, he also worked together with artists in making prints, surimono and ehon. Nanpo made calligraphies (calligraphy) mainly in the tanzaku and kakemono format. He also produced paintings; these are now extremely rare.
The most famous of Nanpo's paintings are in the album Shokusanjin ennyo meisekishu ("A collection of Shokusanjin memorabilia"). The album consists of 41 double pages of letters, paintings, fan paintings, sketches, and poems; ink and colour on paper and silk. The album size is 15 à9in (40 x 24 cm). Date;1804. All of the works bears Nanpo's writing. Some works was coproduced and inscribed by other gifted people. The inscribed works includes examples by the kabuki actor Ichikawa Danjà «rà  V, the geisha Katsu, the courtesan Nareginu, the kyà Âka master Shikatsube Magao, the novelist Santà  Kyà Âden, and the kanshi (Chinese-style verse) poets Kikuchi Gozan and à Âkubo Shibutsu. There are paintings by the ukiyo-e artists Hokusai and Hokuba in the album. A further two fan paintings, one with a Chinese-style landscape by Haruki Nanmei (1795âÂÂ1878) and a playful image of the Chinese poet Li Bai in his cups by Unshitsu Dojin, shows Shokusanjin's links to the more aloft of the literati artists.
The album is a compendium of material documenting the interaction between prominent members of literary, theatre, and art circles of the day. Shokusanjin as Nanpo signs himself here produced two small sketches which were mounted into the album. The first sketch is of a geisha and the other of an oiran (courtesan).
The album is in the Chiba city Museum of Art, ex. provenance; Azabu Museum and Anders Rikardson Collection.
Nanpo produced the first version of the Ukiyo-e Ruikà  (, "Various Thoughts on Ukiyo-e") in 1790. the Ukiyo-e Ruikà  is a collection of commentaries and biographies of ukiyo-e artists was circulated in handwritten copies subject with numerous additions and alterations over the years; it did not appear in print in the Edo period.