Late 14th-early 15th century culture centered on the 3rd shogun Ashikaga Yoshimitsu's Kitayama villa (including the Golden Pavilion). It fused aristocratic and warrior cultures with Ming influences from the tally trade (begun 1404). The Golden Pavilion (1397) integrates three styles on three floors: shinden-zukuri, buke, and Zen. Noh theater's perfection defines this era, as Kan'ami and Zeami elevated it to yūgen art under Yoshimitsu's patronage. Zeami's "Fūshikaden" (ca. 1402) remains Noh's supreme theoretical text. Ink painters Minchō, Josetsu ("Gourd and Catfish"), and Shūbun flourished.