Showing posts with label Toyokuni I. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toyokuni I. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 December 2016

44 - Toyokuni I: A picnic party among blossoming plum trees


Ukiyo-e. Träsnitt. Toyokuni I.
Toyokuni I: A picnic party among blossoming plum trees

This is A picnic party among blossoming plum trees, a triptych by Toyokuni I (1769-1825).

Blossoming trees are important in Japanese aesthetics. Cherry blossoms, sakura, are most highly venerated, followed by peach and plum tree blossoms - all of them common motives in Japanese art.


Saturday, 15 October 2016

33 - Toyokuni I: Actor Iwai Hanshirō V as Sukeroku



Ukiyo-e. Woodblock Print. Yakusha-e. Kabuki actor. Uchiwa-e. Fan Print. Toyokuni.
Toyokuni I: Actor Iwai Hanshirō V as Sukeroku, 1816

Utagawa Toyokuni (1769-1825), or Toyokuni I, was a very influential ukiyo-e artist, best known for yakusha-e, kabuki motives. He changed the direction of how yakusha-e developed and set the standard for more than a generation. He even influenced the kabuki theatre itself.

Through Toyokuni and his students, who included Kunisada and Kuniyoshi, the Utagawa school became dominant within ukiyo-e, a dominance previously held by the Torii school.

The picture shows an uchiwa-e, a fan print, Actor Iwai Hanshirō V as Sukeroku, from 1816.

Fans of kabuki used to carry a fan (no pun intended) with a picture of their idol. However, there were fan-shaped prints in other sub-genres of ukiyo-e as well.