Toyohara Kunichika

Toyohara Kunichika

Infobox Person


image_size = 162
caption = Toyohara Kunichika
birth_name = Ōshima Yasohachi
birth_date = 1835
birth_place = Edo (present-day Tokyo), Japan
death_date = 1900
death_place = Tokyo
other_names = Arakawa Yasohachi; Kazunobu
known_for = Woodblock prints of kabuki actors, beautiful women
nihongo|Toyohara Kunichika|豊原 国周|""'Toyohara Kunichika" (1835–1900) was a Japanese woodblock print artist. Talented as a child, at about thirteen he became a student of Tokyo's then-leading print maker, Utagawa Kunisada. His deep appreciation and knowledge of kabuki drama led to his production primarily of "ukiyo-e" actor-prints, which are woodblock prints of kabuki actors and scenes from popular plays of the time.

An alcoholic and womanizer, Kunichika also portrayed women deemed beautiful ("bijinga"), contemporary social life, and a few landscapes and historical scenes. He worked successfully in the Edo era, and carried those traditions into the Meiji era. To his contemporaries and now to some modern art historians, this has been seen as a significant achievement during a transitional period of great social and political change in Japan's history. [Newland, pp 7-16]

Early life and education

, and the boy became Arakawa Yasohachi.Newland p 7]

Little is known about his childhood except that, as a youth, Yasohachi earned a reputation as a prankster and drew complaints from his neighbors, and that at nine he was involved in a fight at the Sanno Festival in Asakusa . [Hinkel, p 70] At age ten he was apprenticed to a thread and yarn store. However, because he preferred painting and sketching to learning the dry goods trade, at eleven he moved to a shop near his father's bathhouse. There he helped in the design of Japanese lampshades called "andon", consisting of a wooden frame with a paper cover.Hinkel, p 74] When he was twelve, his older brother, Chōkichi, opened a raised picture [cite web
url= http://www.kabuki21.com/oshie2.php
title= Oshie Series: Kagekiyo
accessmonthday= July 8
accessyear= 2008
author= Aragorô, Shôriya
work=Kabuki 21
publisher
] shop, and Yasohachi drew illustrations for him.

It is believed that around age twelve Yasohachi began to study with Toyohara Chikanobu. At the same time he designed actor portraits for battledores sold by a shop called "Meirindo". His teacher gave him the name "Kazunobu". It may have been on the recommendation of Chikanobu that the boy was accepted the following year as an apprentice in the studio of Utagawa Kunisada, [Newland, pp 7-8] the leading and most prolific print maker of the mid-nineteenth century. [cite web
url=http://www.viewingjapaneseprints.net/texts/ukiyoetexts/ukiyoe_pages/kunisada3.html
title= Utagawa Kunisada (1786–1865)
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Fiorillo, John
work=Viewing Japanese Prints
publisher=
] By 1854 the young artist had made his first confirmed signed printNewland p 11] and had taken the name "Kunichika", a composite of the names of this two teachers, Kunisada and Chikanobu.Newland p 12] His early work was derivative of the Utagawa style and some of his prints were outright copies (an accepted practice of the time). [Newland, pp 17-22] While working in Kunisada's studio Kunichika was assigned a commission to make a print illustrating a bird's-eye view of Tenjinbashi Avenue following the terrible earthquake of 1855 that destroyed most of the city. This assignment suggests that he was considered one of Kunisada's better students.

The "prankster" artist got into trouble in 1862 when, in response to a commission for a print illustrating a fight at a theater, he made a "parody print" ("mitate-e") which angered the students who had been involved in the fracas. They ransacked Kunichika's house and tried to enter Kunisada's studio by force. His mentor revoked Kunichika's right to use the name he had been given but relented later that year. Decades afterwards Kunichika described himself as greatly "humbled" by the experience.

Kunichika's status continued to rise and he was commissioned to create several portraits of his teacher. When Kunisada died in 1865, his student was commissioned to design two memorial portraits. The right panel of the portrait contains an obituary written by the writer, Kanagaki Robun, while the left contains memorial poems written by the three top students, including Kunichika.

Artist on the cusp of a new era

At the time Kunichika began his serious studies the late Edo period, an extension of traditions based on a feudal society, was about to end. The "modern" Meiji era (1868–1912), a time of rapid modernization, industrialization, and extensive contact with the West, was in stark contrast to what had come before. , effectively destroying the careers of most. [Newland, p 8]

As Kunichika matured his reputation as a master of design and of drama grew steadily. In guides rating "ukiyo-e" artists his name appeared in the top ten in 1865, 1867, and 1885, when he was in eighth, fifth, and fourth place, respectively. In 1867, one year before the collapse of the Tokugawa Shogunate, he received an official commission by the government to contribute ten pictures to the 1867 World Exhibition in Paris. [Newland, pp 17, 35] He also had a print at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. [Hinkel, p 77] Kunichika often portrayed beautiful women ("bijinga"), but his finest works are considered to have been bust, half- and three-quarter length, and close-up or "large-head" portraits of actors, and triptychs that presented "wide-screen" views of plays and popular stories. [Newland, pp 21, 22, 28]

Although Kunichika's Meiji-era works remained rooted in the traditions of his teachers, he made an effort to incorporate references to modern technology. In 1869 he did a series jointly with Yoshitoshi, a more "modern" artist in the sense that he depicted faces realistically. [Newland, p 23] In addition, Kunichika experimented with "Western" vanishing point perspective.

The press affirmed that Kunichika's success continued into the Meiji era. In July 1874, the magazine "Shinbun hentai" said that: "Color woodcuts are one of the specialties of Tokyo, and that Kyôsai, Yoshitoshi, Yoshiiku, Kunichika, and Ginkô are the experts in this area." In September 1874 The same journal held that: "The masters of Ukiyoe: Yoshiiku, Kunichika and Yoshitoshi. They are the most popular Ukiyo-e artists." In 1890, the book "Tôkyô meishô doku annai" (Famous Views of Tokyo), under the heading of "woodblock artist", gave as examples Kunichika, Kunisada, Yoshiiku, and Yoshitoshi. In November 1890 a reporter for the newspaper "Yomiuri Shimbun" wrote about the specializations of artists of the Utagawa school: "Yoshitoshi was the specialist for warrior prints, Kunichika the woodblock artist known for portraits of actors, and Chikanobu for court ladies."cite web
url= http://www.castlefinearts.com/Japanese_fine_arts_woodblock_prints/Kunichika_Biography.aspx
title= Kunichika (1835–1900)
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Castle, Frank
work=Artists' Bios
publisher= Castle Fine Arts
] [Hinkel, p 78]

Contemporary observers noted Kunichika's skillful use of color in his actor prints, but he was also criticized for his choices. Unlike most artists of the period, he made use of strong reds and dark purples, often as background colors, rather than the softer colors that had previously been used. These new colors were made of aniline dyes imported in the Meiji period from Germany. (For the Japanese the color red meant progress and enlightenment in the new era of Western-style progress.) [Newland, p 19]

Like most artists of his era and genre, [Faulkner pp 32, 34, 35] Kunichika created many series of prints, including: "Yoshiwara beauties compared with thirty-six poems;" "Thirty-two fashionable physiognomies;" "Sixteen Musashi parodying modern customs;" "Thirty-six good and evil beauties;" "Thirty-six modern restaurants;" "Mirror of the flowering of manners and customs;" "Fifty-four modern feelings matched with chapters of The Tale of Genji;" "Scenes of the twenty-four hours parodied;" "Actors in theatrical hits as great heroes in robber plays;" "Eight views of bandits parodied." [cite web
url= http://www.man-pai.com/Series/kunichika_e.htm
title= Man-Pai / Room 2: Kunichika
accessmonthday= June 28
accessyear= 2008
author=Manuel Paias
work=A list of the main series of some of the most important artists of Japanese Woodblock Prints
] In 1863 Kunichika was one of a number of artists who contributed landscape prints to two series of famous Tokaido scenes commissioned to commemorate the journey made by the shogun Iemochi from Edo to Kyoto to pay his respects to the emperor. [cite web
url= http://www.artelino.com/articles/tokaido-meisho-no-uchi.asp
title= Tokaido meisho-no-uchi
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Wanczura, Dieter
coauthors= Wanczura, Yorie
work=edutainment
publisher= artelino
] Otherwise, his landscapes were primarily theater sets, or backgrounds for groups of beauties enjoying the out-of-doors. He recorded some popular myths and tales, but rarely illustrated battles. When portraying people he only occasionally showed figures wearing Western dress, despite its growing popularity in Japan. He is known to have done some "shunga" (erotic art) prints but attribution can be difficult as, like most artists of the time, he did not always sign them. [cite web
url= http://www.artelino.com/articles/shunga.asp
title= Shunga
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Wanczura, Dieter
coauthors= Wanczura, Yorie
publisher= artelino
] Kunichika had many students but few attained recognition as print artists. In the changing art scene they could not support themselves designing woodblock prints, but had to make illustrations for such popular media as books, magazines and newspapers. His best-known students were Toyohara Chikanobu and Morikawa Chikashige. Both initially followed their master's interest in theater, but later Chikanobu more enthusiastically portrayed women's fashions, and Chikashige did illustrations. Neither is considered by critics to have achieved his master's high reputation. [Newland, p 30]

Kunichika had one female student, Toyohara Chikayoshi, who reportedly became his partner in his later years. Her work reflected the Utagawa style. She competently depicted actors, and the manners and customs of the day. [Newland, pp 30-31]

Personal life

As a young man, Kunichika had a reputation for a beautiful singing voice and as a fine dancer. He is known to have used these talents in amateur burlesque shows.Hinkel, p 71]

In 1861 Kunichika married his first wife, Ohana, and in that same year had a daughter, Hana. The marriage is thought not to have lasted long, as he was a womanizer. He fathered two out-of-wedlock children, a girl and a boy, with whom he had no contact, but he does appear to have remained strongly attached to Hana. [Newland, p 14]

Kunichika was described as having an open, friendly and sincere personality. He enjoyed partying with the geishas and prostitutes of the Yoshiwara district, while consuming abundant amounts of alcohol. His greatest passion, however, was said to be the theater, where he was a backstage regular. His appearance said to be shabby. He was constantly in debt and often borrowed money from the kabuki actors he depicted so admiringly. [Newland, pp 14-16] A contemporary said of him: "Print designing, theater and drinking were his life and for him that was enough."cite web
url= http://www.artelino.com/articles/kunichika.asp
title= Kunichika Toyohara – 1835–1900
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
work= Biography of Japanese print artist Kunichika Toyohara
publisher= artelino
] A contemporary actor, Matsusuke IV, said that when visiting actors backstage for the purpose of sketching them, Kunichika would not socialize but would concentrate intensely on his work. [Newland, p 15]

Around 1897, his older brother opened the "Arakawa Photo" shop, and Kunichika worked in the store. Because Kunichika had a dislike for both the store and photography, only one photograph of him exists.Hinkel p 72] [cite web
url=http://kensaku.kyoto-art.ac.jp/ukiyoe/kuni_e.html
title=Kunichika Toyohara — 1835–1900
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
publisher= Oe Naokichi Collection of Toyohara Kunichika's Ukiyo-e prints at the Kyoto University of Art and Design Collection
]

In October 1898 Kunichika was interviewed for a series of four articles about him, "The Meiji-period child of Edo", which appeared in the Tokyo newspaper "Yomiuri Shimbun". In the introduction to the series, the reporter wrote:

...his house is located on the (north) side of Higashi Kumagaya-Inari. Although his residence is just a partitioned tenement house, it has an elegant, latticed door, a nameplate and letterbox. Inside, the entry...leads to a room with worn tatami mats upon which a long hibachi has been placed. The space is also adorned with a Buddhist altar. A cluttered desk stands at the back of the miserable two-tatami room; it is hard to believe that the well-known artist Kunichika lives here...Looking around with a piercing gaze and stroking his long white beard, Kunichika talks about the height of prosperity of the Edokko...

During the interview, Kunichika claimed to have moved 107 times, but it seems more likely that he moved only ten times.

Kunichika died at his home in Honjo (an eastern suburb of Edo) on July 1, 1900 at the age of 65, due to a combination of poor health and bouts of heavy drinking brought on by the death at 39 of his daughter Hana while giving birth to his grandson, Yoshido Ito, some months previously.Hinkel p 72] He was buried at the Shingon Buddhist sect temple of Honryuji in Imado, Asakusa. His grave marker is thought to have been destroyed in a 1923 earthquake, but family members erected a new one in 1974. In old Japan, it had been a common custom for people of high cultural standing to write a poem before death. On Kunichika's grave his poem reads:

"Since I am tired of painting portraits of people of this world, I will paint portraits of the King of hell and the devils." "
Yo no naka no, hito no nigao mo akitareba, enma ya oni no ikiutsushisemu." [Newland, p 16]

The forgotten artist

In 1915 Arthur Davison Ficke, an Iowa lawyer, poet, and influential collector of Japanese prints, wrote "Chats on Japanese Prints". In the book he listed fifty-five artists, including Kunichika, whose work he dismissed as "degenerate" and as "All that meaningless complexity of design, coarseness of color and carelessness of printing that we associate with the final ruin of the art of color prints." [Ficke, pp 351–353] His opinion, which differed from that of Kunichika's contemporaries, influenced American collectors for many years, with the result that Japanese prints produced in the second half of the nineteenth century, especially figure prints, fell out of favor. [cite web
url= http://www.kiseido.com/printss/ukiyoedx.html
title= Japanese Prints and the World of Go
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Bozulich, Richard
publisher= Kiseido
] [Brown, p 13]

In the late 1920s and early 1930s an author, adventurer, banker and great collector of Japanese art, Kojima Usui, wrote many articles aimed at resurrecting Kunichika's reputation. He was not successful in his day, but his work became a basis for later research, which did not really begin until quite recently.Newland p 38] [cite web
url= http://metropolis.co.jp/tokyo/673/art.asp
title= World of Kojima Usui Collection
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Fujii, Lucy Birmingham
publisher= Metropolis
] In 1876 Laurance P. Roberts wrote in his "Dictionary of Japanese Artists" that Kunichika produced prints of actors and other subjects in the late Kunisada tradition, reflecting the declining taste of the Japanese and the deterioration of color printing. Roberts described him as, "A minor artist, but represents the last of the great ukiyo-e tradition." The cited biography reflects the author's preference for classical ukiyo-e. Richard A. Waldman, owner of The Art of Japan, said of Roberts's view, "Articles such as the above and others by early western authors managed to put this artist in the dustbin of art history." [cite web
url= http://www.theartofjapan.com/ArtistBio.asp?At=Kunichika
title= Kunichika Toyohara (1835–1900)
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
author= Waldman, Richard A.
publisher= The Art of Japan
] An influential reason for Kunichika's return to favor in the western world is the publication, in 1999, in English, of Amy Reigle Newland's "Time present and time past: Images of a forgotten master: Toyohara Kunichika 1835–1900." [cite web
url= http://www.umich.edu/~hartspc/NEAAA/issue61/members/newbook/61b5.html
title= New Books
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
publisher= University of Michigan
] [cite web
url= http://www.hanshan.com/pdf/l44.pdf
title= Hanshan Tang Books — List 144: New Publications; Recent Works on Chinese Ceramics; Latest Acquisitions
accessmonthday= June 24
accessyear= 2008
format=PDF
page=52
publisher= Hanshan Tang Books Ltd.
] In addition, the 2008 show at the Brooklyn Museum, "Utagawa: Masters of the Japanese Print, 1770–1900", and a resulting article in "The New York Times" of 03/22/08 [Citation
last=Johnson
first=Ken
title=Fleeting Pleasures of Life in Vibrant Woodcut Prints
newspaper=The New York Times
date=March 22, 2008
page=289
url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/22/arts/design/22prin.html
] have increased public awareness of and prices for Kunichika prints.

See also

*Woodblock printing in Japan
*Ukiyo-e
*Kabuki

Notes

References

*Citation
last = Brown
first = Kendall
last2 = Green
first2 = Nancy
last3 = Stevens
first3 = Andrew
date = 2006
title = Color Woodcut International: Japan, Britain and America in the Early Twentieth Century
place = Madison, WI, U.S.A.
publisher = Chazen Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison
isbn = 978-0-932900-64

*cite web
title = Castle Fine Arts Biography: Kunichika (1835–1900)
publisher = Castle fine arts
url = http://www.castlefinearts.com/fs_biography.aspx?page=/Japanese_fine_arts_woodblock_prints/Kunichika_Biography.aspx
accessdate = 2007-10-14

*Citation
last = Faulkner
first = Rupert
year = 1999
title = Masterpieces of Japanese Prints: Ukiyo-e from the Victoria and Albert Museum
publication-place = Tokyo, Japan
publisher = Kodansha International Ltd.
language= English
isbn= 978-4-7700-2387-2

*Citation
last = Ficke
first = Arthur Davidson
year = 1915
title = Chats on Japanese Prints
publication-place = London, England
publisher = T. Unwin Ltd.

*cite paper
author = Hinkel, Monika
title = Toyohara Kunichika (1835–1900)
version = Doctoral Dissertation
publisher = Bonn, Universität Bonn
date = 2006
url = http://hss.ulb.uni-bonn.de/diss_online/phil_fak/2006/hinkel_monika/index.htm
format = PDF
accessdate = 2007-10-11
de icon
*Citation
last= Newland
first= Amy Reigle
publication-date =1999
title= Time present and time past: Images of a forgotten master: Toyohara Kunichika, 1835–1900
place= Leyden, the Netherlands
publisher= Hotei Publishing
language= English
isbn= 978-9074822114
:

"At this time this is the only substantive reference written in English. All other sources cite this one. The book consists of "Toyohara Kunichika: His life and personality," pp 7–16; "Aspects of Kunichika's art: Images of beauties and actors," pp 17–29; "Kunichika's legacy," pp 30–32; footnotes, pp 33–38; "Kawanabe Kyosai and Toyohara Kunichika," an essay by Shigeru Oikawa, pp 39–49. The remainder of the book, pp 50–154, is an illustrated catalog of 133 of the prints; an appendix on signatures and seals, pp 155–164; a glossary, pp 165–167."

External links

Biography
* [http://www.artelino.com/articles/kunichika.asp Artelino biography]
* [http://kensaku.kyoto-art.ac.jp/ukiyoe/kuni_e.html Oe Naokichi Collection of Toyohara Kunichika's Ukiyo-e prints at the Kyoto University of Art and Design collection.]

Looking at Kunichika
* [http://www.ukiyo-e-world.com/ukiyo-e/kunichika.asp Kunichika's Masculine Ideal]
* [http://www.viewingjapaneseprints.net/texts/topictexts/artist_varia_topics/anilinedyes3.html Aniline Dyes (Toyohara Kunichika)]

Museum Sites
* [http://search.famsf.org:8080/search.shtml?keywords=Kunichika Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco]
* [http://www.mfa.org/collections/search_art.asp?coll_keywords=kunichika&submit.x=0&submit.y=0 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]

Image Sources
* [http://www.castlefinearts.com/fs_biography.aspx?page=/Japanese_fine_arts_woodblock_prints/Kunichika_Biography.aspx Castle fine arts]
* [http://www.japaneseprints.net/prints.cfm?ID=Kunichika Japan Print Gallery]
* [http://www.man-pai.com/Room2/kunichika_e.htm Man-Pai / Japanese Prints]
* [http://www.ohmigallery.com/Gallery/Kunichika/Kunichika.htm Ohmi Gallery: Ukiyo-e and Shin Hanga prints from the collection of Dr Ross Walker]
* [http://www.robynbuntin.com/MoreByArtist.asp?ArtistID=308 Robyn Buntin of Honolulu]
* [http://www.tokugawagallery.com/archiveskunichika.html Tokugawa Gallery]
* [http://hss.ulb.uni-bonn.de/diss_online/phil_fak/2006/hinkel_monika/0877-2.pdf Toyohara Kunichika (1835–1900) Bildband]

Persondata
NAME = Kunichika, Toyohara
ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Oshima Yasohachi,Arakawa Yasohachi,
SHORT DESCRIPTION = Life of important 19th century Japanese woodblock print artist
DATE OF BIRTH = 1835
PLACE OF BIRTH = Edo (present-day Tokyo)
DATE OF DEATH = 1900
PLACE OF DEATH = Honjo, Saitama prefecture, central Honshu, Japan


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