fan crest   title
Home •  Recent Update •  Sales Gallery •  Archives
Articles •  Varia •  Glossary •  Biographies •  Bibliography
Search •  Video •  Contact Us •  Conditions of Sale •  Links
 

Archive: Hirosada (廣貞)

Description:

(1R) Nakamura Utaemon IV (四代目 中村歌右衛門) as Katô Masakiyo (加藤正清) and Nakamura Tomosa II (中村友三) as the boatman (sendô) Yojibei (船頭与次兵衛), in Act 3 of Keisei kiyome no funauta (An innocent courtesan and a sailor’s song, けいせい清船諷), Naka Theater, Osaka

Signature:
Hirosada (廣貞)
Seals:
Artist seal: Rankei (蘭畦)
Publisher:
Kinkadô (金花堂)
Date:
1/1851
Format:
(H x W)
Chûban nishiki-e diptych
25.5 x 37.0 cm
Impression:
Excellent deluxe edition with metallics, burnishing, and mica
Condition:
Excellent color and overall condition, unbacked thick paper; extremely faint album crease along L edge of R sheet
Price (USD/¥):
SOLD

Inquiry: HSD84

Comments:
Background

Katô Masakiyo (加藤正清) was the theatrical stand-in for the historical Katô Kiyomasa (加藤清正 1562-1611), the son of a blacksmith who was legendary for his ferocity in battle, earning him the nickname Kishôkan (Demon general). He commanded the second division in the warlord Toyotomi Hideyoshi's first Korean invasion of 1592. Kiyomasa led troops in Korea again in 1597, but was recalled the next year following Hideyoshi's death. Although he next allied himself with Tokugawa Ieyasu — one of Hideyoshi's generals and the eventual founder of the hereditary dynasty of Tokugawa shoguns — he ran afoul of Ieyasu after opposing a plan to murder Hideyoshi's son, Hideyori. Kiyomasa's death in 1611 was suspicious, possibly the result of poisoning on orders from Ieyasu. In kabuki, Masakiyo's tale takes an ominous turn when circumstances force him to meet with Kitabatake (a theatrical stand-in for Tokugawa Ieyasu, whose explicit portrayal in theater or literature was banned by the shogunate). Kitabatake serves Masakiyo a poisoned cup of saké, which he drinks, knowing it will be fatal. Masakiyo nevertheless manages to stay alive for months to protect his lord until finally succumbing to the deadly brew.

The plot of Keisei kiyome no funauta (An innocent courtesan and a sailor's song: けいせい清船諷) is unknown to us, but it is undoubtedly an adaptation of historical events and figures in the kabuki and bunraku genre called jidaimono (lit., "period piece" or historical drama: 時代物).

Design

This is an fine and dramatic diptych by Hirosada. Katô Masakiyo skewers an assailant with his long lance (naginata 長刀 or 薙刀) as sendô Yojibei, clenching down on his short sword (wakizashi 脇差), clings to the rock. The surging sea and claw-like cresting waves, surely drawn in a manner reminscent of Katsushika Hokusai, serve as a graphic equivalent of human aggression, and amplified, too, by the brilliant red colorant spanning the two sheets.

Our impression has superb color and remains in very good condition. The carving and printing reach the apex of printmaking in Kamigata.

For more about the artist, see Hirosada Biography.

References: IKBYS-IV, no. 337; WAS-VI, no. 230; MFA Boston, acc. no. 11.35583a-b