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Toyokuni III (AKA Kunisada, 1786 - 1864)

Chapter 10: Hana no En

Series: Lasting Impressions of a Late Genji Collection
Medium: Woodblock Print
Date: 1858
Size (H x W): 14 x 19.5 (inches)
Publisher: Uoya Eikichi
Seals: Date seal, blockcutter seal (Yokokawa Hori Take)
Signature: Toyokuni ga
Condition: Good color, very good impression, faint soiling near edges, embellished with embossing and burnishing.
$600.00

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Description

Though the right sheet of this diptych identifies this design as chapter 10, it does not align with the traditional Tale of Genji. Instead, this chapter corresponds to the popular serial novel A Rustic Genji.

About the artist

View works signed Kunisada

Toyokuni III, also known as Kunisada, was born in the Honjo district of Edo as Kunisada Tsunoda. Kunisada’s family owned a small hereditary ferryboat service. Though his father, an amateur poet, died when Kunisada was a child, the family business provided some financial security. During his childhood, he showed considerable promise in painting and drawing. Due to strong familial ties with literary and theatrical circles, he spent time studying actor portraits.


At age 14, he was admitted to study under Toyokuni, head of the Utagawa school. Kunisada’s ukiyo-e woodblock prints embody the characteristics of the Utagawa school, focusing on traditional subjects such as kabuki, bijin (beautiful women), shunga (erotic prints), and historical prints. Kunisada's first known woodblock print dates to 1807, his first illustrated book to 1808. His career took off from the beginning. Many of his works became overnight successes and he was considered the “star attraction” of the Utagawa school. He signed his works “Kunisada,” sometimes with the studio names of Gototei and Kochoro affixed. In 1844, he adopted the name of his teacher and became Toyokuni III. Kunisada passed away in 1864 in the same neighborhood that he was born. He was 70 years old. Kunisada was a highly popular, and the most active, Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the 19th century. In his time, his reputation surpassed those of his contemporaries Hiroshige and Kuniyoshi.