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Archive: Utagawa Kunisada I (歌川國貞); later called Toyokuni III (豊國)

Description:
(R) Nakamura Fukusuke (中村福助) as Danshichi Kurobei( 団七九郎兵衛); (L) Nakamura Kanjaku, 中村歌雀) as Migawaya Giheiji (三河屋義平次); (L inset) Ichikawa Ichizô (市川市蔵) as Issun Tokubei (一寸徳兵衛) in Zohô natsu matsuri otoko kagami (Mirror of the men’s expanded summer festival: 増補夏祭男鑑 (増補夏祭浪花鑑)
Signature:
Toyokuni ga (豊國画)
Seals:
Date/aratame Censor Seal: 未四改 (hitsuji-shi aratame, "examined in the 4th year of the goat")
Publisher:
Kagaya Kichibei (加賀屋吉兵衛); Firm Name: Sanseidô
Date:
4-5/1859
Format:
(H x W)
Ôban nishiki-e diptych
36.6 x 49.6 cm
Impression:
Excellent
Condition:
Very good color and condition (slight trimming; slight rubbing along bottom edges; slight soil and a light blue pigment stain on Danshichi's left leg; generally quite fresh and clean)
Price (USD/¥):
Comments:
Background

In the twelfth month of 1745, kabuki fans in Osaka flocked to the city's three ô-shibai (big or main theaters: 大芝居) located on adjacent blocks in the entertainment district along the Dôtonbori (Dôton Canal: 道頓堀). The Ônishi, Naka, and Kado theaters had plunged into a spirited competition, each assembling their best casts to perform a new nine-act play called Natsu matsuri Naniwa kagami (Mirror of the summer festival in Osaka: 夏祭浪花鑑). The sewamono ("everyday piece" or domestic drama: 世話物) had premiered in the seventh month as a puppet play (ningyô jôruri, 淨瑠璃 or bunraku, 文楽) at the Takemoto no Shibai, Osaka, and was first staged for kabuki during the eighth month by two rival theatres in Kyoto, the Miyako Mandayû no Shibai and Minamigawa no Shibai. Edo did not stage a production until the fifth month of 1747 at the Morita-za.

The main character was a hot-tempered fishmonger and otokodate (lit., "upright man" or chivalrous commoner: 男伊達 or 男作) named Danshichi Kurobei. A popular and well-established role type, the otokodate was a defender of the weak and oppressed. Of all the Danshichi mono (plays about Danshichi: 團七物), Natsu matsuri would prove to be the most popular, with performances spanning more than 250 years, continuing unabated today. By the end of the first quarter of the 19th century, after a change in standardized forms or interpretation (kata: 型), Danshichi also became emblematic of the boldly tattooed otokodate, giving impetus to some of the most visually compelling images in actor prints.

Design

Kunisada's print depicts the confrontation between Danshichi and his father-in-law, Giheiji, in one of kabuki's most famous episodes, Nagamachi no ura no ba ("Back street scene in Nagamachi"). As their argument escalates over Danshichi's payment to ransom the courtesan Kotoura, sounds of revelry can be heard from an approaching Kozû Shrine Festival parade in Dôtonbori — note the banners and janôme-gasa ("snake's-eye umbrella: 蛇の目傘) in the background. During performances of this play, the boisterous music provides an incongruous carnivalesque accompaniment to the action in the gloomy backstreet. Danshichi draws his sword, accidentally cutting Giheiji, who screams, "Murderer!" Overcome with rage, Danshichi, his unknotted hair falling to his shoulders, strips down to a red loincloth, revealing his tattooed body. As he moves in on his prey, Danshichi performs various koroshi no mie (murderer's poses: 殺し見得) in counterpoint to Giheiji's displays of panic and supplication. Finally, after asking for forgiveness, Danshichi ends the old man's life with a thrust of his sword. Danshichi then washes splattered blood and Giheiji's muddy handprints from his body, using water from a nearby well. He escapes by mingling with the large crowd of festival celebrants.

The colors on this impression are quite well preserved, and it is an early pull from the woodblocks.

Another impression is in the Tsubouchi Memorial Theater Museum, Waseda University, nos. 0101-0278. For an earlier example by Kunisada of the Danshichi role, see KNS04.

References: KNP-7, p. 70; John Fiorillo, "The Beauty of Cruelty: The Origins of Danshichi and His Evolution as a Tattooed Anti-hero in Natsu matsuri." Andon, Society for Japanese Arts, 2009, no. 87; 27-43