Collection
Kitagawa Utamaro
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
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Catching Fireflies - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Chushingura: Act X of The Storehouse of Loyalty - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Act VII from the series The Storehouse of Loyal Retainers - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Hanaōgi of Ōgiya from the series Picture Puzzles - Kitagawa Utamaro
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The Flirtatious Type, from Ten Types in the Physiognomy of Women - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Women and a Man in the Country; Some Pageant - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Boating Party with Children Swimming - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Woman and Child - Kitagawa Utamaro
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The Lady of Rokujo being Visited by the Princess Aoi - Kitagawa Utamaro
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The Poet Sōjō Henjō (816–890) Slipping a Letter into a Woman’s Sleeve - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Jihei of Kamiya Eloping with Koharu of Kinokuniya - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Azumaya no Hana - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Young Mother Nursing Her Baby - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Seiro Niwaka Onna Geisha no Bu Tojin Shishi Sumo - Kitagawa Utamaro
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A Woman at Her Toilet Seated before a Mirror, Having Her Hair Combed by a Kameyui (Woman Hairdresser) - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Lantern Float - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Washing Day - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Girls Playing a Game with Shells - Kitagawa Utamaro
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The Full Moon at the Time of the Imo Harvest - Kitagawa Utamaro
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A Merry Evening Party - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Cherry Blossoms and Irises - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Shells Under Water - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Kitchen Scene - Kitagawa Utamaro
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A Party of Merrymakers in a House in the Yoshiwara on a Moonlight Night - Kitagawa Utamaro
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Artist Biography
Kitagawa Utamaro
Utamaro was arrested in 1804 for making prints depicting the sixteenth-century military ruler Toyotomi Hideyoshi. He was manacled for fifty days. He died two years later, at roughly fifty-three. The connection between the punishment and the death is debated, but the timing suggests something broke.
Almost nothing is certain about his early life. He was born around 1753, possibly in Edo, possibly in Kyoto, possibly in Kawagoe. He began publishing prints in the 1770s under the guidance of the publisher Tsutaya Juzaburo, who recognised what Utamaro could do with a portrait of a woman.
What he could do was unprecedented. He invented the okubi-e format: large head-and-shoulders portraits of individual women, mostly from the Yoshiwara pleasure district, printed in close-up with minimal background. Before Utamaro, bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women) showed groups of figures in full length. He isolated the face, the tilt of the head, the expression. The prints are psychologically specific in a way that had not existed in Japanese printmaking.
He also published books of insect studies and volumes of shunga (erotica), and he made portraits of ordinary town women, not just courtesans. Ohisa and Okita, two shopgirls who appeared in his Three Beauties of the Present Day, became famous across Edo because of his prints. He turned real people into celebrities, which may be the first documented instance of an artist functioning as a kind of media platform.
Tsutaya Juzaburo died in 1797. Utamaro was reportedly devastated. Some critics feel his work never reached the same level afterward. He produced over two thousand prints in his career.
Almost nothing is certain about his early life. He was born around 1753, possibly in Edo, possibly in Kyoto, possibly in Kawagoe. He began publishing prints in the 1770s under the guidance of the publisher Tsutaya Juzaburo, who recognised what Utamaro could do with a portrait of a woman.
What he could do was unprecedented. He invented the okubi-e format: large head-and-shoulders portraits of individual women, mostly from the Yoshiwara pleasure district, printed in close-up with minimal background. Before Utamaro, bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women) showed groups of figures in full length. He isolated the face, the tilt of the head, the expression. The prints are psychologically specific in a way that had not existed in Japanese printmaking.
He also published books of insect studies and volumes of shunga (erotica), and he made portraits of ordinary town women, not just courtesans. Ohisa and Okita, two shopgirls who appeared in his Three Beauties of the Present Day, became famous across Edo because of his prints. He turned real people into celebrities, which may be the first documented instance of an artist functioning as a kind of media platform.
Tsutaya Juzaburo died in 1797. Utamaro was reportedly devastated. Some critics feel his work never reached the same level afterward. He produced over two thousand prints in his career.
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