Saturday 26 August 2017

78 - Hirokage: Head of a Tiger Eating a Rooster


Ukiyo-e. Hirokage.
Hirokage: Head of a Tiger Eating a Rooster

The somewhat confusing title of this print is Head of a Tiger Eating a Rooster. It is from 1860 and the artist is Utagawa Hirokage, who was active between 1855 and 1865. He was one of Hiroshige's students.

Quite clearly, this is not a tiger, but a leopard. There are other ukiyo-e prints as well, depicting leopards, where they are also called tigers in the title. In Japan of that time, they obviously believed that leopards were female tigers.

Saturday 19 August 2017

77 - Sadanobu: Kitano Tenmangû keidai


Ukiyo-e. Kitano Tenmangû Shrine. Miyako meisho no uchi. Sadanobu.
Sadanobu: Kitano Tenmangû keidai

Here we have a print by Hasegawa Sadanobu I (1809–1879), The Precincts of the Kitano Tenmangû Shrine (Kitano Tenmangû keidai), from the series Famous Places in the Capital (Miyako meisho no uchi), from 1870-1871.

Prints with views of famous places were a subgenre of late ukiyo-e and filled the same function as postcards did later.

Sadanobu I, who founded the Hasegawa school in Osaka, created mainly yakusha-e and views from famous places. He was a good artist, but not in parity with the greatest masters.


Saturday 12 August 2017

76 - Eishô: Motozue of the Daimonjiya


Ukiyo-e. Bijinga. Okubi-e. Eishô.
Eishô: Motozue of the Daimonjiya

This is an okubi-e by Chôkôsai Eishô (active approximately 1780-1800) - Motozue of the Daimonjiya, from the series Contest of Beauties of the Pleasure Quarters (Kakuchû bijin kurabe), from 1795-1797.

Eishô created several beautiful bijinga in the form of okubi-e. This picture, a portrait of a courtesan, is made extra interesting by the addition of a cat as a contrast to the face.


Saturday 5 August 2017

75 - Chōshun: Beauty in the Snow


Ukiyo-e. Bijinga. Chōshun.
Chōshun: Beauty in the Snow

Miyagawa Chōshun (1683-1753) founded the Miyagawa school. He and his students did not create woodblock prints; they exclusively painted.

This painting is Beauty in the Snow. The composition is typical for certain forms of East Asian art, where emptiness is used as an active element of the composition.


Saturday 29 July 2017

74 - Toshinobu II: Nitta no Shiro Tadatsune faces the Goddess of Mount Fuji and her dragon


Ukiyo-e. Toshinobu II. Nitta no Shiro Tadatsune.
Toshinobu II: Nitta no Shiro Tadatsune faces the Goddess of Mount Fuji and her dragon


This is a triptych by Toshinobu II, which shows Nitta no Shiro Tadatsune facing the Goddess of Mount Fuji and her dragon in a cave on Mt. Fuji. Tadatsune’s followers were afraid to enter the cave but Nitta no Shiro took a torch and entered. The Goddess congratulates him on his bravery.

Shirai Toshinobu (1866-1903) was a student of Yoshitoshi, who gave him the name Toshinobu.

This is a very beautiful print, although one can claim that the depicted animal is not a dragon but a serpent. In art, however, the borderline between the two is vague. Otherwise, strictly, a dragon has limbs, a serpent does not.

The name “Toshinobu” causes some confusion as to whom it really refers, because Yoshitoshi had three students using that name, and two of them signed with the same kanji characters [年信]. I believe, however, that here we have a triptych by Shirai Toshinobu, who is sometimes called Yamazaki Toshinobu II.


Saturday 22 July 2017

73 - Kyōsai: Title Unknown


Ukiyo-e. Kyōsai.
Kyōsai: Title Unknown

I have not been able to find any title to this print by Kawanabe Kyōsai, so we leave it at that just to enjoy its graphic power. The colours and the composition are very effective and somehow the image looks very "modern".


Saturday 15 July 2017

72 - Hiroshige: Scorpionfish, Isaki, and Ginger


Ukiyo-e. Hiroshige. Kacho-e. Fish.
Hiroshige: Scorpionfish, Isaki, and Ginger

Hiroshige is best known for his landscapes, but he also made exquisite kachô-e. Mainly flowers and birds, but also fish. Here we have Scorpionfish, Isaki, and Ginger, from an untitled series known as Large Fish. It can be dated to 1832-1835.