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

Shibakuni (芝國) and Yoshikuni (芳國)

Description:
[SHIBAKUNI] Nakamura Matsue III (中むら松江) as Kazuki no Osoma (かづきのお仙); [YOSHIKUNI] Nakamura Shikan II (中村芝翫) as Niki Saburô Kunisada (仁木三郎國定) in Konoshita kage hazama gassen (Konoshita and divine intervention: A loophole in battle: 木下蔭狭間合戦), Naka Theater, Osaka
Signature:
[1R] Saikotei Shibakuni ga (西光亭芝国画); [2R] Jukôdô Yoshikuni ga (壽好堂芳國画)
Seals:
No artist seals
Publisher:
Honsei (Honya Seishichi (本屋清七)
Date:
7/1826
Format:
(H x W)
Ôban nishiki-e
37.4 x 50.7 cm
Impression:
Excellent
Condition:
Excellent color and overall condition, unbacked; expertly repaired binding holes, reinforced LR edge of R sheet.
Price (USD/¥):
$550 / Contact us to pay in yen (¥)

Order/Inquiry: SHB09

Comments:
Background

Konoshita kage hazama gassen (Konoshita and divine intervention: A loophole in battle: 木下蔭狭間合戦) was one of the Ishikawa Goemon mono (Plays about Ishikawa Goemon 石川五右衛門物), the legendary fugitive outlaw. The historical Goemon was a masterless samurai (rônin: 浪人) during the reign of the shôgun Toyotomi Hideyoshi. At age sixteen he murdered three men while attempting to steal from his master. After his escape, he lived as a bandit for the next two decades until, in 1594, he was captured during a failed attempt to kill Hideyoshi. Goemon met a grisly end by being boiled in oil. The theatrical adaptations of this tale often transformed Goemon into a hero — fearless, elusive, and endowed with magical powers. The first staging of Goemon's exploits occurred in the 1680s..

Design

Collaborative works (gassaku 合作) comprise paintings, drawings and prints on the same theme in a shared pictorial space by two or more artists of comparable status. In such cases, like our Shibakuni / Yoshikuni diptych, various actor portrayals in Kamigata polyptychs were designed by two or more artists, one to a sheet, forming single compositions. Far less common are single sheets with portraits by two or more print designers

The strong pink shading inside the cone of light on the right sheet is unusually prominent. Other impressions show only a hint of pink, or none at all. The cone of light emitted by the lamp is a convention found in ukiyo-e both in Osaka and Edo. Sometimes, artists or their printers darkened colors just beyond the illumination by overprinting with gray (HKE101). Our diptych, however, does not have that effect.

This impression is early and the colors are very good.

References: WAS-IV, no. 315; SDK, p. 193, no. 408; Tokyo Fuji Art Museum