View of Ushijima from the Mouth of the Sanya Canal and the Asakusa River in the Eastern Capital, from an untitled series of Western-style Views of Edo
Artist/Maker
Shotei Hokuju 昇亭北寿
(Japanese, active 1790–1820)
Dateearly 1820s
MediumColor woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
DimensionsHorizontal ōban; overall: 10 3/8 × 14 5/8 in. (26.3 × 37.2 cm)
Credit LineMary A. Ainsworth Bequest
Portfoliountitled series of Western-style Views of Edo
Object number1950.495
Status
Not on viewKuniyoshi was an ukiyo-e painter and printmaker who worked in Edo. When a youth, he was accepted as a pupil by Utagawa Toyokuni. He studied Tosa, Kano, and Maruyama painting, and then founded his own style, which was so popular that it is said that the young men of his time often asked him to tattoo his designs on their bodies. Kuniyoshi was famous for his prints of actors and animals. He also specialized, with invention and gusto, in illustrations of heroic episodes in Japanese history; the best of his landscapes equal those of Hiroshige. His early style was comparatively simple, with landscape backgrounds in the manner of Hiroshige. Later his work became increasingly complex, with a taste for the bizarre, the fantastic, and the ghoulish.
Exhibition History
The Cultured Landscape in China and Japan
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 6, 2007 - August 13, 2007 )
Envisioning Edo's Splendor: The Floating World and Beyond
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 3, 2009 - July 19, 2009 )
Collections
- Asian
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