Showing posts with label Eizan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eizan. Show all posts

Saturday, 18 March 2017

55 - Eizan: Hanaôgi of the Ôgiya


Ukiyo-e. Bijinga. Eizan. Hanaôgi of the Ôgiya. Women of Seven Houses.
Eizan: Hanaôgi of the Ôgiya, 1806-1808


The widely underrated Kikugawa Eizan (1787-1867), completed and ended the development of classical bijinga, which leads in a straight line from Haronubu, via Koryusai, Kiyonaga and Utamaro, finally to peak with Eizan. Both Koryusai and Eizan are often overlooked, but they certainly deserve attention as the masters they were.

This is Hanaôgi of the Ôgiya, from the series Women of Seven Houses (Shichikenjin), a pun on Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove. Eizan created this print sometime between 1806 and 1808.


Saturday, 14 January 2017

46 - Eizan: Geisha Playing the Hand-Game Kitsune-ken


Ukiyo-e. Kikugawa Eizan. Kitsune-ten. Triptych.
Eizan: Geisha Playing the Hand-Game Kitsune-ken

Kikugawa Eizan (1787-1867) studied under Utamaro and in certain circles he is seen as a plagiarist of his master with little originality of his own. This is not true. Although Eizan builds on Utamaro's style, he developed it further. With him, classical bijinga reaches its peak and its end; what's coming after him introduces new artistic elements, alien to original ukiyo-e.

The picture is a triptych, Geisha Playing the Hand-Game Kitsune-ken, from about 1820.

Kitsune-ken is a game similar to rock-paper-scissors. From left to right we see Village head [庄屋 shōya], which wins over the Hunter; Fox [狐 kitsune], which wins over the Village Head; and Hunter [猟師 ryōshi], which wins over the Fox.