Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Japanese (1798 - 1861) Primary
Poem by Sadanobu kô: Gion nyôgo, from the Series Ogura Imitations of One Hundred Poems by One Hundred Poets (Ogura nazorae Hyakunin isshu) 「小倉擬百人一首 貞信公 祇園女御」
Edo1847
Color woodblock
Sheet
14 1/2 x 9 1/2 in. (36.83 x 24.13 cm)
Bryn Mawr College
Accession Number:
2022.13.324
Other Number(s):
Kuniyoshi164 (Donor Number)
Geography:
Asia, Japan
Classification:
Fine and Visual Arts; Prints; Woodcuts
Culture/Nationality:
Japanese
Keywords
Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:
- edged weapons - Weapons featuring a sharp edge or point for cutting, thrusting, clubbing, slashing, or various combinations thereof.
- Edo - Refers to the period and style that developed from the unification of Japan in 1600 until the end of the shogunal dynasty in 1868. During this period, economic expansion encouraged the rise of an educated merchant class who created their own forms of literature and theater as well as new schools of painting and woodblock printing. A wide diversity of pictorial subjects and styles developed during this period and many 19th century Western artists were influenced by them.
- kimonos - Loose, wide-sleeved garments fastened around the waist with an obi or broad sash, traditionally worn by Japanese men and women.
- nishiki-e - Japanese prints in which numerous blocks are used to print many colors.
- oban - Japanese prints of a standard size about 15 3/4 by 10 1/2 inches.
- poems - Written or oral compositions characterized by condensed language chosen for sound and suggestive power as well as meaning, and by the use of such literary techniques as structured meter, natural cadences, rhyme, or metaphor.
- poetry - Literary and oral genre rooted in the compressed and cogent imaginative awareness or associations of experiences, ideas, or emotional responses and arranged under an organized criterion of meaning, conscious and unconscious expression, symbolism, formal or informal pattern, sound, and rhythm. The genre encompasses narrative, dramatic, satiric, didactic, erotic, and personal forms.
- poets - Authors ol compositions characterized by condensed language chosen for sound and suggestive power as well as meaning.
- Ukiyo-e - Distinctive genre in painting and other media, but most prominently in woodblock printing. It arose in the Edo period (1600-1868) and built up a broad popular market among the middle classes. Subject matter typically focused on brothel districts and kabuki theatres, with formats ranging from single sheet prints to book illustrations. Generally, the style is characterized by a mixture of the realistic narrative of the Kamakura period and the mature decorative style of the Momoyama and Edo periods. Distinctive styles and specialties in subject matter were developed by different schools throughout the period.
- woodcuts - Prints made using the process of woodcut, which is a relief process in which the design is cut into and printed from the plank side of a wood block; distinct from "wood engraving (process)," which is a relief process using the grain end of a wood block.
Additional Images
Click an image to view a larger version
-
Owner Name: S. Kathleen Doster, Class of 1978
Role: Donor
Place: Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, USA
Acquisition Method: Purchased from Auction Ukiyo-e
Disposal Method: Donation to Bryn Mawr College
Ownership Start Date: 2/24/2010
Ownership End Date: 7/22/2022
Comparanda List
The following Comparanda exist for this object:
- "Museum of Fine Arts Boston: Online Collections." (Accessed July 1, 2020): collections.mfa.org. Accession No. 11.42976.
Related Bibliography List
The following Related Bibliography exist for this object:
- B. W. Robinson, Kuniyoshi, The Warrier-Prints (Ithaca, New York: Cornell/Phaidon Books, 1982), 132-133. Figure Number: S46.26
- H. Herwig and J.S. Mostow. The Hundred Poets Compared (Leiden, The Netherlands: Hotei Publishing, 2007), 86-87. Figure Number: 26
Your current search criteria is: Keyword is "BOWUG".
View current selection of records as: