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Utamaro

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese: 喜多川 歌麿; c. 1753 – 31 October 1806) was a Japanese artist. He is one of the most highly regarded designers of ukiyo-e woodblock prints and paintings, and is best known for his bijin ōkubi-e "large-headed pictures of beautiful women" of the 1790s. He also produced nature studies, particularly illustrated books of insects.

Kitagawa Utamaro
喜多川 歌麿
Portrait by Eishi, 1815
Born
Kitagawa Ichitarō

c. 1753
Died31 October 1806(1806-10-31) (aged 52–53)
Resting placeSenkōji [ja]
35°40′47.09″N 139°35′40.71″E / 35.6797472°N 139.5946417°E / 35.6797472; 139.5946417
StyleUkiyo-e
Ase o fuku onna (Woman Wiping Sweat), Ukiyo-e, 1798
Takashima Ohisa using two mirrors to observe her coiffure

Little is known of Utamaro's life. His work began to appear in the 1770s, and he rose to prominence in the early 1790s with his portraits of beauties with exaggerated, elongated features. He produced over 2000 known prints and was one of the few ukiyo-e artists to achieve fame throughout Japan in his lifetime. In 1804 he was arrested and manacled for fifty days for making illegal prints depicting the 16th-century military ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and died two years later.

Utamaro's work reached Europe in the mid-nineteenth century, where it was very popular, enjoying particular acclaim in France. He influenced the European Impressionists, particularly with his use of partial views and his emphasis on light and shade, which they imitated. The reference to the "Japanese influence" among these artists often refers to the work of Utamaro.

Background edit

Ukiyo-e art flourished in Japan during the Edo period from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries. The art form took as its primary subjects courtesans, kabuki actors, and others associated with the ukiyo "floating world" lifestyle of the pleasure districts. Alongside paintings, mass-produced woodblock prints were a major form of the genre.[1] Ukiyo-e art was aimed at the common townspeople at the bottom of the social scale, especially of the administrative capital of Edo. Its audience, themes, aesthetics, and mass-produced nature kept it from consideration as serious art.[2]

In the mid-eighteenth century, full-colour nishiki-e prints became common. They were printed by using a large number of woodblocks, one for each colour.[3] Towards the close of the eighteenth century there was a peak in both quality and quantity of the work.[4] Kiyonaga was the pre-eminent portraitist of beauties during the 1780s, and the tall, graceful beauties in his work had a great influence on Utamaro, who was to succeed him in fame.[5] Shunshō of the Katsukawa school introduced the ōkubi-e "large-headed picture" in the 1760s.[6] He and other members of the Katsukawa school, such as Shunkō, popularized the form for yakusha-e actor prints, and popularized the dusting of mica in the backgrounds to produce a glittering effect.[7]

Biography edit

 
Ukiyo-e of yama-uba with blackened teeth and Kintarō (Yamanba and Kintaro Sakazuki series)
 
Flowers of Edo: Young Woman's Narrative Chanting to the Shamisen c. 1803

Early life edit

Little is known of Utamaro's life. He was born Kitagawa Ichitarō[a] in c. 1753.[9] As an adult, he was known by the given names Yūsuke,[b] and later Yūki.[c][10] Early accounts have given his birthplace as Kyoto, Osaka, Yoshiwara in Edo (modern Tokyo), or Kawagoe in Musashi Province (modern Saitama Prefecture); none of these places has been verified. The names of his parents are not known; it has been suggested his father may have been a Yoshiwara teahouse owner, or Toriyama Sekien,[9] an artist who tutored him[11] and who wrote of Utamaro playing in his garden as a child.[9]

Apparently, Utamaro married, although little is known about his wife and there is no record of their having had children. There are, however, many prints of tender and intimate domestic scenes featuring the same woman and child over several years of the child's growth among his works.

Apprenticeship and early work edit

Sometime during his childhood Utamaro came under the tutelage of Sekien, who described his pupil as bright and devoted to art.[11] Sekien, although trained in the upper-class Kanō school of Japanese painting, had become in middle age a practitioner of ukiyo-e and his art was aimed at the townspeople in Edo. His students included haiku poets and ukiyo-e artists such as Eishōsai Chōki.[12]

Utamaro's first published work may be an illustration of eggplants in the haikai poetry anthology Chiyo no Haru[d] published in 1770. His next known works appear in 1775 under the name Kitagawa Toyoaki,[e][14]—the cover to a kabuki playbook entitled Forty-eight Famous Love Scenes[f] which was distributed at the Edo playhouse Nakamura-za.[13] As Toyoaki, Utamaro continued as an illustrator of popular literature for the rest of the decade, and occasionally produced single-sheet yakusha-e portraits of kabuki actors.[15]

The young, ambitious publisher [Tsutaya Jūzaburō] enlisted Utamaro and in the autumn of 1782 the artist hosted a lavish banquet whose list of guests included artists such as Kiyonaga, Kitao Shigemasa, and Katsukawa Shunshō, as well as writers such as Ōta Nanpo (1749–1823)and Hōseidō Kisanji [ja]. It was at this banquet that it is believed the artist first announced his new art name, Utamaro. Per custom, he distributed a specially made print for the occasion, in which, before a screen bearing the names of his guests, is a self-portrait of Utamaro making a deep bow.[16]

Utamaro's first work for Tsutaya appeared in a publication dated as 1783: The Fantastic Travels of a Playboy in the Land of Giants,[g] a kibyōshi picture book created in collaboration with his friend Shimizu Enjū, a writer.[h] In the book, Tsutaya described the pair as making their debuts.[i][18]

At some point in the mid-1780s, probably 1783, he went to live with Tsutaya Jūzaburō. It is estimated that he lived there for approximately five years. He seems to have become a principal artist for the Tsutaya firm. Evidence of his prints for the next few years is sporadic, as he mostly produced illustrations for books of kyōka ("crazy verse"), a parody of the classical waka form. None of his work produced during the period 1790–1792 has survived.

Height of fame edit

In about 1791 Utamaro gave up designing prints for books and concentrated on making single portraits of women displayed in half-length, rather than the prints of women in groups favoured by other ukiyo-e artists.

In 1793 he achieved recognition as an artist, and his semi-exclusive arrangement with the publisher Tsutaya Jūzaburō ended. Utamaro then went on to produce several series of well-known works, all featuring women of the Yoshiwara district.

Over the years, he also created a number of volumes of animal, insect, and nature studies and shunga, or erotica. Shunga prints were quite acceptable in Japanese culture, not associated with a negative concept of pornography as found in western cultures, but considered rather as a natural aspect of human behavior and circulated among all levels of Japanese society.[19]

Later life edit

Tsutaya Jūzaburō died in 1797, and Utamaro thereafter lived in Kyūemon-chō, then Bakuro-chō, and finally near the Benkei Bridge.[20] Utamaro was apparently very upset by the loss of his long-time friend and supporter. Some commentators feel that after this event, his work never reached the heights previously attained.[who?]

A law went into effect in 1790 requiring prints to bear a censor's seal of approval to be sold. Censorship increased in strictness over the following decades, and violators could receive harsh punishments. From 1799 even preliminary drafts required approval.[21] A group of Utagawa-school offenders including Toyokuni had their works repressed in 1801.[22] In 1804, Utamaro ran into legal trouble over a series of prints of samurai warriors, with their names slightly disguised; the depiction of warriors, their names, and their crests was forbidden at the time. Records have not survived of what sort of punishment Utamaro received.[23]

Arrest of 1804 edit

The Ehon Taikōki [ja],[j] published from 1797 to 1802, detailed the life of the 16th-century military ruler, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The work was widely adapted, such as for kabuki and bunraku theatre. When artists and writers put out prints and books based on the Ehon Taikōki in the disparaged ukiyo-e style, it attracted reprisals from the government. In probably the most famous case of censorship of the Edo period,[24] Utamaro was imprisoned in 1804,[k] after which he was manacled along with Tsukimaro, Toyokuni, Shuntei, Shun'ei, and Jippensha Ikku for fifty days and their publishers subjected to heavy fines.[26]

Government documents of the case are no longer extant, and there are few other documents relating to the incident. It appears that Utamaro was most prominent of the group. The artists might have offended the authorities by identifying the historical figures by name and with their identifying crests and other symbols, which was prohibited, and by depicting Hideyoshi with prostitutes[l] of the pleasure quarters.[27] Utamaro's censored prints include one of the daimyō Katō Kiyomasa lustily gazing at a Korean dancer at a party,[28] another of Hideyoshi holding the hand of his page Ishida Mitsunari in a sexually suggestive manner,[29] and another of Hideyoshi with his five consorts viewing the cherry blossoms at the temple Daigo-ji in Kyoto, a historical event famous for displaying Hideyoshi's extravagance. This last displays the names of each consort while placing them in the typical poses of courtesans at a Yoshiwara party.[30]

Death edit

Records give Utamaro's death date as the 20th day of the 9th month of the year Bunka, which equates to 31 October 1806.[9] He was given the Buddhist posthumous name Shōen Ryōkō Shinshi.[m][31] Apparently with no heirs, his tomb at the temple Senkōji [ja] was left untended. A century later, in 1917, admirers of Utamaro had the decayed grave repaired.[31]

Pupils edit

Utamaro had a number of pupils, who took names such as Kikumaro (later Tsukimaro), Hidemaro, and Takemaro. These artists produced works in the master's style, though none are considered of Utamaro's quality. Sometimes he allowed them to sign his name. Of his students, Koikawa Shunchō married Utamaro's widow on the master's death and took on the name Utamaro II [ja].[32] After 1820 he produced his work under the name Kitagawa Tetsugorō.[33]

Analysis edit

 
One Hundred Stories of Demons and Spirits

[Utamaro] created an absolutely new type of female beauty. At first he was content to draw the head in normal proportions and quite definitely round in shape; only the neck on which this head was posed was already notably slender ... Towards the middle of the tenth decade these exaggerated proportions of the body had reached such an extreme that the heads were twice as long as they were broad, set upon slim long necks, which in turn swayed upon very slim shoulders; the upper coiffure bulged out to such a degree that it almost surpassed the head itself in extent; the eyes were indicated by short slits, and were separated by an inordinately long nose from an infinitesimally small mouth; the soft robes hung loosely about figures of an almost unearthly thinness.

— Woldemar von Seidlitz, Geschichte des japanischen Farbenholzschnittes, 1897[34]

What little information about Utamaro's life that has been passed down is often contradictory, so analysis of his development as an artist relies chiefly on his work itself.[9] Utamaro is known primarily for his bijin-ga portraits of female beauties, though his work ranges from kachō-e "flower-and-bird pictures" to landscapes to book illustrations.[33]

Utamaro's early bijin-ga follow closely the example of Kiyonaga. In the 1790s his figures became more exaggerated, with thin bodies and long faces with small features.[34] Utamaro experimented with line, colour, and printing techniques to bring out subtle differences in the features, expressions, and backdrops of subjects from a wide variety of class and background. Utamaro's individuated beauties were in sharp contrast to the stereotyped, idealized images that had been the norm.[35]

By the end of the 1790s, especially following the death of his patron Tsutaya Jūzaburō in 1797, Utamaro's prodigious output declined in quality.[36] By 1800 his exaggerations had become more extreme, with faces three times as long as they are wide and body proportions of eight heads length to the body. By this point, critics such as Basil Stewart consider Utamaro's figures to "lose much of their grace";[34] these later works are less prized amongst collectors.[citation needed]

Utamaro produced more than two thousand prints during his working career, amongst which are over 120 bijin-ga print series. He made illustrations for nearly 100 books and about 30 paintings.[14] He also created a number of paintings and surimono, as well as many illustrated books, including more than thirty shunga books, albums, and related publications. Among his best-known works are the series Ten Studies in Female Physiognomy, A Collection of Reigning Beauties, Great Love Themes of Classical Poetry (sometimes called Women in Love containing individual prints such as Revealed Love and Pensive Love), and Twelve Hours in the Pleasure Quarters.[citation needed] His work appeared from at least 60 publishers, of which Tsutaya Jūzaburō and Izumiya Ichibei were the most important.[14]

He alone, of his contemporary ukiyo-e artists, achieved a national reputation during his lifetime. His sensuous beauties generally are considered the finest and most evocative bijinga in all of ukiyo-e.[37]

He succeeded in capturing the subtle aspects of personality and the transient moods of women of all classes, ages, and circumstances. His reputation has remained undiminished since. Kitagawa Utamaro's work is known worldwide, and he generally is regarded as one of the half-dozen greatest ukiyo-e artists of all time.[38]

Legacy edit

Utamaro was recognized as a master in his own age. He appears to have achieved a national reputation at a time when even the most popular Edo ukiyo-e artists were little known outside the city.[39] Due to his popularity Utamaro had many imitators, some of whom likely signed their work with his name; this is believed to include students of his and his successor, Utamaro II.[32] On rare occasions Utamaro signed his work "the genuine Utamaro"[n] to distinguish himself from these imitators.[33] Forgeries and reprints of Utamaro's work are common; he produced a large body of work, but his earlier, more popular works are difficult to find in good condition.[40]

 
Utamaro had a profound influence on French Impressionists such as Mary Cassatt.
The Coiffure, drypoint and aquatint, c. 1890–91

A wave of interest in Japanese art swept France from the mid-19th century, called Japonisme. Exhibitions in Paris of Japanese art began to be staged in the 1880s, include an Utamaro exhibition in 1888 by the German-French art dealer Siegfried Bing.[41] The French Impressionists regarded Utamaro's work on a level akin with Hokusai and Hiroshige.[42] French artist-collectors of Utamaro's work included Monet,[43] Degas,[44] Gauguin,[45] and Toulouse-Lautrec[46]

Utamaro had an influence on the compositional, colour,[47] and sense of tranquility of the American painter Mary Cassatt's work.[48] The shin-hanga ("new prints") artist Goyō Hashiguchi (1880–1921) was called the "Utamaro of the Taishō period" (1912–1926) for his manner of depicting women.[49] The painter character Seiji Moriyama in the British novelist Kazuo Ishiguro's An Artist of the Floating World (1986) has a reputation as a "modern Utamaro" for his combination of Western techniques Utamaro-like feminine subjects.[50]

In 2016 Utamaro's Fukaku Shinobu Koi set the record price for an ukiyo-e print sold at auction at 745000.[51]

 
Utamaro's Fukaku Shinobu Koi (c. 1793–94) set an auction record of €745000 in 2016.

The 2016 role-playing game Persona 5 has a character named Yusuke Kitagawa after Utamaro's surname.

Historiography edit

The only surviving official record of Utamaro is a stele at Senkō-ji Temple, which gives his death date as the 20th day of the 9th month of the year Bunka, which equates to 31 October 1806. The record states he was 54 by East Asian age reckoning, by which age begins at 1 rather than 0. From this a birth year of c. 1753 is deduced.[9][9]

Utamaro has gained general acceptance as one of the form's greatest masters.[52] The earliest document of ukiyo-e artists, Ukiyo-e Ruikō, was first compiled while Utamaro was active. The work was not printed, but exists in various manuscripts that different writers altered and expanded. The earliest surviving copy, the Ukiyo-e Kōshō, wrote of Utamaro:[53]

Kitagawa Utamaro, personal name Yūsuke
At the start entered the studio of Toriyama Sekien and studied pictures in the Kanō school. Later drew pictures of the styles and manners of men and women and resided temporarily with ezōshiya Tsutaya Jūzaburō. Now lives in Benkeibashi [ja]. Many nishiki-e.[53]

The earliest comprehensive historical and critical works on ukiyo-e came from the West,[54] and often denied Utamaro a place in the ukiyo-e canon.[52] Ernest Fenollosa's Masters of Ukioye of 1896 was the first such overview of ukiyo-e. The book posited ukiyo-e as having evolved towards a late-18th-century golden age that began to decline with the advent of Utamaro,[54] which he condemned for his "gradual elongation of the figure, and an adoption of violent emotion and extravagant attitudes". Fenollosa had harsher criticism for Utamaro's pupils, who he considered to have "carried the extravagances of their teacher to a point of ugliness".[55] In his Chats on Japanese Prints of 1915, Arthur Davison Ficke concurred that with Utamaro ukiyo-e entered a period of exaggerated, manneristic decadence.[56]

Laurence Binyon, the Keeper of Oriental Prints and Drawings at the British Museum, wrote an account in Painting in the Far East in 1908 that was similar to Fenollosa's, considering the 1790s a period of decline, but placing Utamaro amongst the masters.[57] He called Utamaro "one of the world's artists for the intrinsic qualities of his genius" and "the greatest of all the figure-designers" in ukiyo-e, with a "far greater resource of composition" than his peers and an "endless" capacity for "unexpected invention".[58] James A. Michener re-evaluated the development of ukiyo-e in The Floating World of 1954, in which he places the 1790s as "the culminating years of ukiyo-e", when "Utamaro brought the grace of Sukenobu to its apex".[58] Seiichirō Takahashi [ja]'s Traditional Woodblock Prints of Japan of 1964 set the golden age of ukiyo-e at the period of Kiyonaga, Utamaro, and Sharaku, followed by a period of decline with the declaration beginning in the 1790s of strict sumptuary laws that dictated what could be depicted in artworks.[59]

The French art critic Edmond de Goncourt published Outamaro, the first monograph on Utamaro, in 1891,[60] with help from the Japanese art dealer Tadamasa Hayashi.[61] British ukiyo-e scholar Jack Hillier had the monograph Utamaro: Colour Prints and Paintings published in 1961.[62]

Print series edit

A partial list of his print series and their dates includes:

Paintings edit

Gallery edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kitagawa Ichitarō (北川市太郎); note the spelling 北川 differs from the spelling 喜多川 Utamaro used as an artist.[8]
  2. ^ Yūsuke (勇助)[8]
  3. ^ Yūki (勇記)[8]
  4. ^ 千代の春 Chiyo no haru, "Eternal Spring"
  5. ^ Kitagawa Toyoaki (北川豊章); "北川豊章" may also read "Toyoakira".[13]
  6. ^ Forty-eight Famous Loves Scenes, (四十八手 恋所訳, Shijū Hatte Koi no Showake)
  7. ^ Migi no Tōri Tashika ni Uso Shikkari Gantori-chō (右通慥而啌多雁取帳)[16]
  8. ^ Shimizu Enjū (志水燕十)
  9. ^ Utamaro and Enjū appeared to have worked on a previous book together during 1781: A Short History of the Sartorial Exploits of a Great Connoisseur of Inari Machi (身貌大通神略縁起, Minari Daitsūjin Ryakuengi), which Utamaro signed as "Utamaro, Dilettante of Shinobugaoka". Kiyoshi Shibui [ja] suggests the publication of the work may have been delayed.[17]
  10. ^ 絵本太閤記 Ehon Taikōki, "Illustrated Chronicles of the Regent"; seven parts in eighty-four volumes; text by Takeuchi Kakusai, based on an early Taikōki by Ose Hoan; illustrations by Okada Gyokuzan[24]
  11. ^ 23 June 1804, according to Ōta Nanpo's diary[25]
  12. ^ 遊女 yūjo
  13. ^ Shōen Ryōkō Shinshi (秋円了教信士)[8]
  14. ^ 正銘歌麿 Shōmei Utamaro

References edit

  1. ^ Fitzhugh 1979, p. 27.
  2. ^ Kobayashi 1982, pp. 67–68.
  3. ^ Kobayashi 1997, pp. 80–83.
  4. ^ Kobayashi 1997, p. 91.
  5. ^ Lane 1962, p. 220.
  6. ^ Kondō 1956, p. 14.
  7. ^ Gotō 1975, p. 81.
  8. ^ a b c d Gotō 1975, p. 74.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Collia-Suzuki 2008, p. 10.
  10. ^ Gotō 1975, p. 74; Kobayashi 1982, p. 72.
  11. ^ a b Kobayashi 1982, p. 72.
  12. ^ Kobayashi 1982, pp. 72–73.
  13. ^ a b Kobayashi 1982, p. 74.
  14. ^ a b c Marks 2012, p. 76.
  15. ^ Kobayashi 1982, p. 75.
  16. ^ a b Kobayashi 1982, p. 76.
  17. ^ Kobayashi 1982, p. 79.
  18. ^ Kobayashi 1982, pp. 76, 79.
  19. ^ Hayakawa, Monta; Gerstle, C. Andrew (2013). "Who Were the Audiences for "Shunga?"". Japan Review. 26: 17–36 – via JSTOR.
  20. ^ Goncourt, Locey & Locey 2012, p. 11.
  21. ^ Michener 1954, p. 231.
  22. ^ Lane 1962, p. 224.
  23. ^ Collia-Suzuki 2008, p. 30.
  24. ^ a b Davis 2007, pp. 281–282.
  25. ^ Davis 2007, p. 290.
  26. ^ Davis 2007, p. 292.
  27. ^ Davis 2007, pp. 289–291.
  28. ^ Davis 2007, p. 304.
  29. ^ Davis 2007, p. 305.
  30. ^ Davis 2007, pp. 306–308.
  31. ^ a b Kobayashi 1982, p. 93.
  32. ^ a b Goncourt, Locey & Locey 2012, p. 21.
  33. ^ a b c Stewart 1922, p. 45.
  34. ^ a b c Stewart 1922, p. 44.
  35. ^ Kobayashi 1997, p. 88.
  36. ^ Kobayashi 1997, pp. 88–89.
  37. ^ Harris, Frederick (2010). Ukiyo-e: The Art of the Japanese Print. Tuttle Publishing. p. 65. ISBN 978-4805310984.
  38. ^ "Ukiyo-e Artists - artelino". www.artelino.com. Retrieved 26 November 2018.
  39. ^ Kobayashi 1982, p. 69.
  40. ^ Stewart 1922, p. 46.
  41. ^ Hokenson 2004, p. 186.
  42. ^ Ives 1974, p. 13.
  43. ^ Fraleigh & Nakamura 2006, p. 96.
  44. ^ Dumas 1997, p. 16.
  45. ^ Ives 1974, p. 96.
  46. ^ Ives 1974, p. 79.
  47. ^ Clement, Houzé & Erbolato-Ramsey 2000, p. 60.
  48. ^ Weinberg 2009, p. 238.
  49. ^ Brown 2006, p. 22; Seton 2010, p. 81.
  50. ^ Lewis 2000, p. 56.
  51. ^ AFP–Jiji staff 2016.
  52. ^ a b Bell 2004, pp. 17–18.
  53. ^ a b Davis 2004, p. 120.
  54. ^ a b Bell 2004, pp. 3–5.
  55. ^ Bell 2004, p. 7.
  56. ^ Bell 2004, p. 11.
  57. ^ Bell 2004, pp. 8–10.
  58. ^ a b Bell 2004, p. 10.
  59. ^ Bell 2004, pp. 14–15.
  60. ^ Bell 2004, p. 18.
  61. ^ Pasler 1986, p. 275.
  62. ^ Bell 2004, p. 308.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • Siegfried Bing, The Art of Utamaro, (The Studio, February 1895)
  • Jack Hillier, Utamaro: Color Prints and Paintings (Phaidon, London, 1961)
  • Muneshige Narazaki, Sadao Kikuchi, (translated John Bester), Masterworks of Ukiyo-E: Utamaro (Kodansha, Tokyo, 1968)
  • Shugo Asano, Timothy Clark, The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro (British Museum Press, London, 1995)
  • Julie Nelson Davis, Utamaro and the Spectacle of Beauty (Reaktion Books, London, and University of Hawai'i Press, 2007)
  • Gina Collia-Suzuki, The Complete Woodblock Prints of Kitagawa Utamaro: A Descriptive Catalogue (Nezu Press, 2009) - complete catalogue raisonné

External links edit

  • Works by Utamaro in the British Museum
  • Utamaro's books in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
  • Kitagawa Utamaro Online at www.artcyclopedia.com
  • Songs of the garden, the "Insect Book" by Utamaro, from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF)

utamaro, this, japanese, name, surname, kitagawa, kitagawa, japanese, 喜多川, 歌麿, 1753, october, 1806, japanese, artist, most, highly, regarded, designers, ukiyo, woodblock, prints, paintings, best, known, bijin, ōkubi, large, headed, pictures, beautiful, women, . In this Japanese name the surname is Kitagawa Kitagawa Utamaro Japanese 喜多川 歌麿 c 1753 31 October 1806 was a Japanese artist He is one of the most highly regarded designers of ukiyo e woodblock prints and paintings and is best known for his bijin ōkubi e large headed pictures of beautiful women of the 1790s He also produced nature studies particularly illustrated books of insects Kitagawa Utamaro喜多川 歌麿Portrait by Eishi 1815BornKitagawa Ichitarōc 1753Died31 October 1806 1806 10 31 aged 52 53 EdoResting placeSenkōji ja 35 40 47 09 N 139 35 40 71 E 35 6797472 N 139 5946417 E 35 6797472 139 5946417StyleUkiyo e Ase o fuku onna Woman Wiping Sweat Ukiyo e 1798 Takashima Ohisa using two mirrors to observe her coiffure Little is known of Utamaro s life His work began to appear in the 1770s and he rose to prominence in the early 1790s with his portraits of beauties with exaggerated elongated features He produced over 2000 known prints and was one of the few ukiyo e artists to achieve fame throughout Japan in his lifetime In 1804 he was arrested and manacled for fifty days for making illegal prints depicting the 16th century military ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi and died two years later Utamaro s work reached Europe in the mid nineteenth century where it was very popular enjoying particular acclaim in France He influenced the European Impressionists particularly with his use of partial views and his emphasis on light and shade which they imitated The reference to the Japanese influence among these artists often refers to the work of Utamaro Contents 1 Background 2 Biography 2 1 Early life 2 2 Apprenticeship and early work 2 3 Height of fame 2 4 Later life 2 4 1 Arrest of 1804 2 5 Death 3 Pupils 4 Analysis 5 Legacy 6 Historiography 7 Print series 8 Paintings 9 Gallery 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Works cited 12 Further reading 13 External linksBackground editUkiyo e art flourished in Japan during the Edo period from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries The art form took as its primary subjects courtesans kabuki actors and others associated with the ukiyo floating world lifestyle of the pleasure districts Alongside paintings mass produced woodblock prints were a major form of the genre 1 Ukiyo e art was aimed at the common townspeople at the bottom of the social scale especially of the administrative capital of Edo Its audience themes aesthetics and mass produced nature kept it from consideration as serious art 2 In the mid eighteenth century full colour nishiki e prints became common They were printed by using a large number of woodblocks one for each colour 3 Towards the close of the eighteenth century there was a peak in both quality and quantity of the work 4 Kiyonaga was the pre eminent portraitist of beauties during the 1780s and the tall graceful beauties in his work had a great influence on Utamaro who was to succeed him in fame 5 Shunshō of the Katsukawa school introduced the ōkubi e large headed picture in the 1760s 6 He and other members of the Katsukawa school such as Shunkō popularized the form for yakusha e actor prints and popularized the dusting of mica in the backgrounds to produce a glittering effect 7 Biography edit nbsp Ukiyo e of yama uba with blackened teeth and Kintarō Yamanba and Kintaro Sakazuki series nbsp Flowers of Edo Young Woman s Narrative Chanting to the Shamisen c 1803 Early life edit Little is known of Utamaro s life He was born Kitagawa Ichitarō a in c 1753 9 As an adult he was known by the given names Yusuke b and later Yuki c 10 Early accounts have given his birthplace as Kyoto Osaka Yoshiwara in Edo modern Tokyo or Kawagoe in Musashi Province modern Saitama Prefecture none of these places has been verified The names of his parents are not known it has been suggested his father may have been a Yoshiwara teahouse owner or Toriyama Sekien 9 an artist who tutored him 11 and who wrote of Utamaro playing in his garden as a child 9 Apparently Utamaro married although little is known about his wife and there is no record of their having had children There are however many prints of tender and intimate domestic scenes featuring the same woman and child over several years of the child s growth among his works Apprenticeship and early work edit Sometime during his childhood Utamaro came under the tutelage of Sekien who described his pupil as bright and devoted to art 11 Sekien although trained in the upper class Kanō school of Japanese painting had become in middle age a practitioner of ukiyo e and his art was aimed at the townspeople in Edo His students included haiku poets and ukiyo e artists such as Eishōsai Chōki 12 Utamaro s first published work may be an illustration of eggplants in the haikai poetry anthology Chiyo no Haru d published in 1770 His next known works appear in 1775 under the name Kitagawa Toyoaki e 14 the cover to a kabuki playbook entitled Forty eight Famous Love Scenes f which was distributed at the Edo playhouse Nakamura za 13 As Toyoaki Utamaro continued as an illustrator of popular literature for the rest of the decade and occasionally produced single sheet yakusha e portraits of kabuki actors 15 The young ambitious publisher Tsutaya Juzaburō enlisted Utamaro and in the autumn of 1782 the artist hosted a lavish banquet whose list of guests included artists such as Kiyonaga Kitao Shigemasa and Katsukawa Shunshō as well as writers such as Ōta Nanpo 1749 1823 and Hōseidō Kisanji ja It was at this banquet that it is believed the artist first announced his new art name Utamaro Per custom he distributed a specially made print for the occasion in which before a screen bearing the names of his guests is a self portrait of Utamaro making a deep bow 16 Utamaro s first work for Tsutaya appeared in a publication dated as 1783 The Fantastic Travels of a Playboy in the Land of Giants g a kibyōshi picture book created in collaboration with his friend Shimizu Enju a writer h In the book Tsutaya described the pair as making their debuts i 18 At some point in the mid 1780s probably 1783 he went to live with Tsutaya Juzaburō It is estimated that he lived there for approximately five years He seems to have become a principal artist for the Tsutaya firm Evidence of his prints for the next few years is sporadic as he mostly produced illustrations for books of kyōka crazy verse a parody of the classical waka form None of his work produced during the period 1790 1792 has survived Height of fame edit In about 1791 Utamaro gave up designing prints for books and concentrated on making single portraits of women displayed in half length rather than the prints of women in groups favoured by other ukiyo e artists In 1793 he achieved recognition as an artist and his semi exclusive arrangement with the publisher Tsutaya Juzaburō ended Utamaro then went on to produce several series of well known works all featuring women of the Yoshiwara district Over the years he also created a number of volumes of animal insect and nature studies and shunga or erotica Shunga prints were quite acceptable in Japanese culture not associated with a negative concept of pornography as found in western cultures but considered rather as a natural aspect of human behavior and circulated among all levels of Japanese society 19 Later life edit Tsutaya Juzaburō died in 1797 and Utamaro thereafter lived in Kyuemon chō then Bakuro chō and finally near the Benkei Bridge 20 Utamaro was apparently very upset by the loss of his long time friend and supporter Some commentators feel that after this event his work never reached the heights previously attained who A law went into effect in 1790 requiring prints to bear a censor s seal of approval to be sold Censorship increased in strictness over the following decades and violators could receive harsh punishments From 1799 even preliminary drafts required approval 21 A group of Utagawa school offenders including Toyokuni had their works repressed in 1801 22 In 1804 Utamaro ran into legal trouble over a series of prints of samurai warriors with their names slightly disguised the depiction of warriors their names and their crests was forbidden at the time Records have not survived of what sort of punishment Utamaro received 23 Arrest of 1804 edit The Ehon Taikōki ja j published from 1797 to 1802 detailed the life of the 16th century military ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi The work was widely adapted such as for kabuki and bunraku theatre When artists and writers put out prints and books based on the Ehon Taikōki in the disparaged ukiyo e style it attracted reprisals from the government In probably the most famous case of censorship of the Edo period 24 Utamaro was imprisoned in 1804 k after which he was manacled along with Tsukimaro Toyokuni Shuntei Shun ei and Jippensha Ikku for fifty days and their publishers subjected to heavy fines 26 Government documents of the case are no longer extant and there are few other documents relating to the incident It appears that Utamaro was most prominent of the group The artists might have offended the authorities by identifying the historical figures by name and with their identifying crests and other symbols which was prohibited and by depicting Hideyoshi with prostitutes l of the pleasure quarters 27 Utamaro s censored prints include one of the daimyō Katō Kiyomasa lustily gazing at a Korean dancer at a party 28 another of Hideyoshi holding the hand of his page Ishida Mitsunari in a sexually suggestive manner 29 and another of Hideyoshi with his five consorts viewing the cherry blossoms at the temple Daigo ji in Kyoto a historical event famous for displaying Hideyoshi s extravagance This last displays the names of each consort while placing them in the typical poses of courtesans at a Yoshiwara party 30 Utamaro prints censored in 1804 nbsp Katō Kiyomasa at a party with Korean dancers nbsp Hideyoshi and his Five Wives Viewing the Cherry blossoms at Higashiyama Death edit Records give Utamaro s death date as the 20th day of the 9th month of the year Bunka which equates to 31 October 1806 9 He was given the Buddhist posthumous name Shōen Ryōkō Shinshi m 31 Apparently with no heirs his tomb at the temple Senkōji ja was left untended A century later in 1917 admirers of Utamaro had the decayed grave repaired 31 Pupils editUtamaro had a number of pupils who took names such as Kikumaro later Tsukimaro Hidemaro and Takemaro These artists produced works in the master s style though none are considered of Utamaro s quality Sometimes he allowed them to sign his name Of his students Koikawa Shunchō married Utamaro s widow on the master s death and took on the name Utamaro II ja 32 After 1820 he produced his work under the name Kitagawa Tetsugorō 33 Analysis edit nbsp One Hundred Stories of Demons and Spirits Utamaro created an absolutely new type of female beauty At first he was content to draw the head in normal proportions and quite definitely round in shape only the neck on which this head was posed was already notably slender Towards the middle of the tenth decade these exaggerated proportions of the body had reached such an extreme that the heads were twice as long as they were broad set upon slim long necks which in turn swayed upon very slim shoulders the upper coiffure bulged out to such a degree that it almost surpassed the head itself in extent the eyes were indicated by short slits and were separated by an inordinately long nose from an infinitesimally small mouth the soft robes hung loosely about figures of an almost unearthly thinness Woldemar von Seidlitz Geschichte des japanischen Farbenholzschnittes 1897 34 What little information about Utamaro s life that has been passed down is often contradictory so analysis of his development as an artist relies chiefly on his work itself 9 Utamaro is known primarily for his bijin ga portraits of female beauties though his work ranges from kachō e flower and bird pictures to landscapes to book illustrations 33 Utamaro s early bijin ga follow closely the example of Kiyonaga In the 1790s his figures became more exaggerated with thin bodies and long faces with small features 34 Utamaro experimented with line colour and printing techniques to bring out subtle differences in the features expressions and backdrops of subjects from a wide variety of class and background Utamaro s individuated beauties were in sharp contrast to the stereotyped idealized images that had been the norm 35 By the end of the 1790s especially following the death of his patron Tsutaya Juzaburō in 1797 Utamaro s prodigious output declined in quality 36 By 1800 his exaggerations had become more extreme with faces three times as long as they are wide and body proportions of eight heads length to the body By this point critics such as Basil Stewart consider Utamaro s figures to lose much of their grace 34 these later works are less prized amongst collectors citation needed Utamaro produced more than two thousand prints during his working career amongst which are over 120 bijin ga print series He made illustrations for nearly 100 books and about 30 paintings 14 He also created a number of paintings and surimono as well as many illustrated books including more than thirty shunga books albums and related publications Among his best known works are the series Ten Studies in Female Physiognomy A Collection of Reigning Beauties Great Love Themes of Classical Poetry sometimes called Women in Love containing individual prints such as Revealed Love and Pensive Love and Twelve Hours in the Pleasure Quarters citation needed His work appeared from at least 60 publishers of which Tsutaya Juzaburō and Izumiya Ichibei were the most important 14 He alone of his contemporary ukiyo e artists achieved a national reputation during his lifetime His sensuous beauties generally are considered the finest and most evocative bijinga in all of ukiyo e 37 He succeeded in capturing the subtle aspects of personality and the transient moods of women of all classes ages and circumstances His reputation has remained undiminished since Kitagawa Utamaro s work is known worldwide and he generally is regarded as one of the half dozen greatest ukiyo e artists of all time 38 Legacy editUtamaro was recognized as a master in his own age He appears to have achieved a national reputation at a time when even the most popular Edo ukiyo e artists were little known outside the city 39 Due to his popularity Utamaro had many imitators some of whom likely signed their work with his name this is believed to include students of his and his successor Utamaro II 32 On rare occasions Utamaro signed his work the genuine Utamaro n to distinguish himself from these imitators 33 Forgeries and reprints of Utamaro s work are common he produced a large body of work but his earlier more popular works are difficult to find in good condition 40 nbsp Utamaro had a profound influence on French Impressionists such as Mary Cassatt The Coiffure drypoint and aquatint c 1890 91 A wave of interest in Japanese art swept France from the mid 19th century called Japonisme Exhibitions in Paris of Japanese art began to be staged in the 1880s include an Utamaro exhibition in 1888 by the German French art dealer Siegfried Bing 41 The French Impressionists regarded Utamaro s work on a level akin with Hokusai and Hiroshige 42 French artist collectors of Utamaro s work included Monet 43 Degas 44 Gauguin 45 and Toulouse Lautrec 46 Utamaro had an influence on the compositional colour 47 and sense of tranquility of the American painter Mary Cassatt s work 48 The shin hanga new prints artist Goyō Hashiguchi 1880 1921 was called the Utamaro of the Taishō period 1912 1926 for his manner of depicting women 49 The painter character Seiji Moriyama in the British novelist Kazuo Ishiguro s An Artist of the Floating World 1986 has a reputation as a modern Utamaro for his combination of Western techniques Utamaro like feminine subjects 50 In 2016 Utamaro s Fukaku Shinobu Koi set the record price for an ukiyo e print sold at auction at 745000 51 nbsp Utamaro s Fukaku Shinobu Koi c 1793 94 set an auction record of 745000 in 2016 The 2016 role playing game Persona 5 has a character named Yusuke Kitagawa after Utamaro s surname Historiography editThe only surviving official record of Utamaro is a stele at Senkō ji Temple which gives his death date as the 20th day of the 9th month of the year Bunka which equates to 31 October 1806 The record states he was 54 by East Asian age reckoning by which age begins at 1 rather than 0 From this a birth year of c 1753 is deduced 9 9 Utamaro has gained general acceptance as one of the form s greatest masters 52 The earliest document of ukiyo e artists Ukiyo e Ruikō was first compiled while Utamaro was active The work was not printed but exists in various manuscripts that different writers altered and expanded The earliest surviving copy the Ukiyo e Kōshō wrote of Utamaro 53 Kitagawa Utamaro personal name Yusuke At the start entered the studio of Toriyama Sekien and studied pictures in the Kanō school Later drew pictures of the styles and manners of men and women and resided temporarily with ezōshiya Tsutaya Juzaburō Now lives in Benkeibashi ja Many nishiki e 53 The earliest comprehensive historical and critical works on ukiyo e came from the West 54 and often denied Utamaro a place in the ukiyo e canon 52 Ernest Fenollosa s Masters of Ukioye of 1896 was the first such overview of ukiyo e The book posited ukiyo e as having evolved towards a late 18th century golden age that began to decline with the advent of Utamaro 54 which he condemned for his gradual elongation of the figure and an adoption of violent emotion and extravagant attitudes Fenollosa had harsher criticism for Utamaro s pupils who he considered to have carried the extravagances of their teacher to a point of ugliness 55 In his Chats on Japanese Prints of 1915 Arthur Davison Ficke concurred that with Utamaro ukiyo e entered a period of exaggerated manneristic decadence 56 Laurence Binyon the Keeper of Oriental Prints and Drawings at the British Museum wrote an account in Painting in the Far East in 1908 that was similar to Fenollosa s considering the 1790s a period of decline but placing Utamaro amongst the masters 57 He called Utamaro one of the world s artists for the intrinsic qualities of his genius and the greatest of all the figure designers in ukiyo e with a far greater resource of composition than his peers and an endless capacity for unexpected invention 58 James A Michener re evaluated the development of ukiyo e in The Floating World of 1954 in which he places the 1790s as the culminating years of ukiyo e when Utamaro brought the grace of Sukenobu to its apex 58 Seiichirō Takahashi ja s Traditional Woodblock Prints of Japan of 1964 set the golden age of ukiyo e at the period of Kiyonaga Utamaro and Sharaku followed by a period of decline with the declaration beginning in the 1790s of strict sumptuary laws that dictated what could be depicted in artworks 59 The French art critic Edmond de Goncourt published Outamaro the first monograph on Utamaro in 1891 60 with help from the Japanese art dealer Tadamasa Hayashi 61 British ukiyo e scholar Jack Hillier had the monograph Utamaro Colour Prints and Paintings published in 1961 62 Print series editA partial list of his print series and their dates includes Utamakura 1788 attributed Chosen Poems 1791 1792 Ten Types of Women s Physiognomies 1792 1793 Famous Beauties of Edo 1792 1793 Ten Learned Studies of Women 1792 1793 Anthology of Poems The Love Section 1793 1794 Snow Moon and Flowers of the Green Houses 1793 1795 Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter 1794 1795 Array of Supreme Beauties of the Present Day 1794 Twelve Hours of the Green Houses 1794 1795 Renowned Beauties from the Six Best Houses 1795 96 Flourishing Beauties of the Present Day 1795 1797 An Array of Passionate Lovers 1797 1798 Ten Forms of Feminine Physiognomy 1802 Paintings editShinagawa no Tsuki Yoshiwara no Hana and Fukagawa no YukiGallery edit nbsp Women playing with the mirror 1797 nbsp Three Beauties of the Present Day c 1793 nbsp Hairdresser from the series Twelve types of women s handicraft nbsp Sugatami Shichinin Keshō nbsp Woman drinking wine nbsp Hari shigoto Needlework c 1794 95 nbsp The Courtesan Ichikawa of the Matsuba Establishment from the series Famous Beauties of Edo nbsp Karagoto of the House of Chojiya in Edo cho Nichome from the series A Comparison of Courtesan Flowers nbsp Tsuitate no Danjo c 1797 nbsp Mother and Child nbsp Man lubricating a male prostitute while someone in the background peeks through the curtains and watches nbsp Young lady blowing on a poppinNotes edit Kitagawa Ichitarō 北川市太郎 note the spelling 北川 differs from the spelling 喜多川 Utamaro used as an artist 8 Yusuke 勇助 8 Yuki 勇記 8 千代の春 Chiyo no haru Eternal Spring Kitagawa Toyoaki 北川豊章 北川豊章 may also read Toyoakira 13 Forty eight Famous Loves Scenes 四十八手 恋所訳 Shiju Hatte Koi no Showake Migi no Tōri Tashika ni Uso Shikkari Gantori chō 右通慥而啌多雁取帳 16 Shimizu Enju 志水燕十 Utamaro and Enju appeared to have worked on a previous book together during 1781 A Short History of the Sartorial Exploits of a Great Connoisseur of Inari Machi 身貌大通神略縁起 Minari Daitsujin Ryakuengi which Utamaro signed as Utamaro Dilettante of Shinobugaoka Kiyoshi Shibui ja suggests the publication of the work may have been delayed 17 絵本太閤記 Ehon Taikōki Illustrated Chronicles of the Regent seven parts in eighty four volumes text by Takeuchi Kakusai based on an early Taikōki by Ose Hoan illustrations by Okada Gyokuzan 24 23 June 1804 according to Ōta Nanpo s diary 25 遊女 yujo Shōen Ryōkō Shinshi 秋円了教信士 8 正銘歌麿 Shōmei UtamaroReferences edit Fitzhugh 1979 p 27 Kobayashi 1982 pp 67 68 Kobayashi 1997 pp 80 83 Kobayashi 1997 p 91 Lane 1962 p 220 Kondō 1956 p 14 Gotō 1975 p 81 a b c d Gotō 1975 p 74 a b c d e f g Collia Suzuki 2008 p 10 Gotō 1975 p 74 Kobayashi 1982 p 72 a b Kobayashi 1982 p 72 Kobayashi 1982 pp 72 73 a b Kobayashi 1982 p 74 a b c Marks 2012 p 76 Kobayashi 1982 p 75 a b Kobayashi 1982 p 76 Kobayashi 1982 p 79 Kobayashi 1982 pp 76 79 Hayakawa Monta Gerstle C Andrew 2013 Who Were the Audiences for Shunga Japan Review 26 17 36 via JSTOR Goncourt Locey amp Locey 2012 p 11 Michener 1954 p 231 Lane 1962 p 224 Collia Suzuki 2008 p 30 a b Davis 2007 pp 281 282 Davis 2007 p 290 Davis 2007 p 292 Davis 2007 pp 289 291 Davis 2007 p 304 Davis 2007 p 305 Davis 2007 pp 306 308 a b Kobayashi 1982 p 93 a b Goncourt Locey amp Locey 2012 p 21 a b c Stewart 1922 p 45 a b c Stewart 1922 p 44 Kobayashi 1997 p 88 Kobayashi 1997 pp 88 89 Harris Frederick 2010 Ukiyo e The Art of the Japanese Print Tuttle Publishing p 65 ISBN 978 4805310984 Ukiyo e Artists artelino www artelino com Retrieved 26 November 2018 Kobayashi 1982 p 69 Stewart 1922 p 46 Hokenson 2004 p 186 Ives 1974 p 13 Fraleigh amp Nakamura 2006 p 96 Dumas 1997 p 16 Ives 1974 p 96 Ives 1974 p 79 Clement Houze amp Erbolato Ramsey 2000 p 60 Weinberg 2009 p 238 Brown 2006 p 22 Seton 2010 p 81 Lewis 2000 p 56 AFP Jiji staff 2016 a b Bell 2004 pp 17 18 a b Davis 2004 p 120 a b Bell 2004 pp 3 5 Bell 2004 p 7 Bell 2004 p 11 Bell 2004 pp 8 10 a b Bell 2004 p 10 Bell 2004 pp 14 15 Bell 2004 p 18 Pasler 1986 p 275 Bell 2004 p 308 Works cited edit AFP Jiji staff 23 June 2016 Utamaro woodblock print fetches world record 745 000 in Paris AFP Jiji Press Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 6 December 2016 Bell David 2004 Ukiyo e Explained Global Oriental ISBN 978 1 901903 41 6 Brown Kendall H 2006 Impressions of Japan Print Interactions East and West In Javid Christine ed Color Woodcut International Japan Britain and America in the Early Twentieth Century Chazen Museum of Art pp 13 29 ISBN 978 0 932900 64 7 Clement Russell T Houze Annick Erbolato Ramsey Christiane 2000 The Women Impressionists A Sourcebook Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30848 2 Collia Suzuki Gina 2008 Utamaro Revealed A Guide to Subjects Themes amp Motifs Nezu Press ISBN 978 0955979606 Davis Julie Nelson 2004 Artistic Identity and Ukiyo e Prints The Representation of Kitagawa Utamaro to the Edo Public In Takeuchi Melinda ed The Artist as Professional in Japan Stanford University Press pp 113 151 ISBN 978 0 8047 4355 6 Davis Julie Nelson 2007 The Trouble with Hideyoshi Censoring Ukiyo e and the Ehon Taikōki Incident of 1804 Japan Forum 19 3 British Association for Japanese Studies 281 315 doi 10 1080 09555800701579933 ISSN 1469 932X S2CID 143374782 Dumas Ann 1997 The Private Collection of Edgar Degas Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 797 6 Fitzhugh Elisabeth West 1979 A Pigment Census of Ukiyo E Paintings in the Freer Gallery of Art Ars Orientalis 11 Freer Gallery of Art The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art University of Michigan 27 38 JSTOR 4629295 Fraleigh Sondra Nakamura Tamah 2006 Hijikata Tatsumi and Ohno Kazuo Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 25785 0 Goncourt Edmond de Locey Michael Locey Lenita 2012 Utamaro Parkstone International ISBN 978 1 78042 928 1 Gotō Shigeki ed 1975 Ukiyo e Taikei 浮世絵大系 Ukiyo e Compendium in Japanese Vol 5 Shueisha OCLC 703810551 Hokenson Jan 2004 Japan France and East West Aesthetics French Literature 1867 2000 Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press ISBN 978 0 8386 4010 4 Ives Colta Feller 1974 The Great Wave The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 228 5 Kobayashi Tadashi 1982 Utamaro Portraits from the Floating World Translated Mark A Harbison Revised ed Kodansha ISBN 4 7700 2730 3 Kobayashi Tadashi 1997 Ukiyo e An Introduction to Japanese Woodblock Prints Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 2182 3 Kondō Ichitarō 1956 Kitagawa Utamaro 1753 1806 Translated by Charles S Terry Tuttle OCLC 613198 ISBN missing Lane Richard 1962 Masters of the Japanese Print Their World and Their Work Doubleday OCLC 185540172 ISBN missing Lewis Barry 2000 Kazuo Ishiguro Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 5514 0 Marks Andreas 2012 Japanese Woodblock Prints Artists Publishers and Masterworks 1680 1900 Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 1 4629 0599 7 Michener James Albert 1954 The Floating World University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0873 0 Pasler Jann 1986 Confronting Stravinsky Man Musician and Modernist University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05403 5 Seton Alistair 2010 Collecting Japanese Antiques Tuttle Publishing ISBN 978 4 8053 1122 6 Stewart Basil 1922 A Guide to Japanese Prints and Their Subject Matter Courier Corporation ISBN 978 0 486 23809 8 Weinberg Helene Barbara 2009 American Impressionism amp Realism A Landmark Exhibition from the MET the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 876509 99 6 Further reading editSiegfried Bing The Art of Utamaro The Studio February 1895 Jack Hillier Utamaro Color Prints and Paintings Phaidon London 1961 Muneshige Narazaki Sadao Kikuchi translated John Bester Masterworks of Ukiyo E Utamaro Kodansha Tokyo 1968 Shugo Asano Timothy Clark The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro British Museum Press London 1995 Julie Nelson Davis Utamaro and the Spectacle of Beauty Reaktion Books London and University of Hawai i Press 2007 Gina Collia Suzuki The Complete Woodblock Prints of Kitagawa Utamaro A Descriptive Catalogue Nezu Press 2009 complete catalogue raisonneExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kitagawa Utamaro nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Utamaro Works by Utamaro in the British Museum Exploring the World of Kitagawa Utamaro Utamaro s books in the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge Kitagawa Utamaro Online at www artcyclopedia com Songs of the garden the Insect Book by Utamaro from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Utamaro amp oldid 1220413616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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