Collection
Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Explore curated art prints selected for distinctive homes and considered interiors.
-
Minakuchi, Ishibe, Kusatsu, Otsu, Kyoto - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
View of Mt. Asama from the Usui Pass - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Tanmeijirō Genshōgo Fighting Under Water - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Inuzaka Keno Tanetomo from Story of Eight Dogs (Hakkenden) - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Portrait of Yato Fumoshichi Norikane - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Horimoto Gidayū Takatoshi - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Scene from a Ghost Story: The Okazaki Cat Demon - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Water Scene (Woman in Boat) - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £37.00 GBPSale price From £37.00 GBP Regular price -
Asakusa Imado - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Akashi Ridayu Hidemoto - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Oiso, Odawara, Hakone, Mishima, Numazu - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Illustration of Poem by the Emperor Kwoko - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
The Poet's Cabin in Tatsumi - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Actor as Samurai with Sword and Plum Blossoms - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Zhu Shouchang - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Picture of Mitsumata - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Album of Ninety-eight Prints from the series Ogura Imitations of One Hundred Poems by One Hundred Poets (Ogura nazorae hyakunin isshu) - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Recovering the Stolen Jewel from the Palace of the Dragon King - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Craftsman by the Twelve Signs of the Zodiac - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
A Branch of Plum (Umegoe) - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
The First Warbler - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Hakoōmaru, Buyū chikara-gusa - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
A Boat upon the Waters - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price -
Evening Faces - Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Print
Regular price From £28.00 GBPSale price From £28.00 GBP Regular price
Artist Biography
Utagawa Kuniyoshi
Kuniyoshi's father was a silk dyer in Edo. The boy helped with pattern design, which gave him an instinct for colour and textile decoration that shows in every print he made. At twelve he caught the attention of Utagawa Toyokuni, the head of the Utagawa school, and was admitted as a student. He was given the name Kuniyoshi in 1814 and became independent.
For the first thirteen years he struggled. The breakthrough came in 1827 with a commission to illustrate the 108 Heroes of the Suikoden, a Chinese adventure novel. He drew tattooed warriors in dynamic poses that broke out of the frame, the tattoos rendered with a detail that started a fashion in Edo. The series was enormously popular and established him as the leading designer of warrior prints.
He loved cats. His studio was always full of them, and he often worked with a kitten tucked inside his kimono. When a cat died, he sent it to a nearby temple, and he kept a Buddhist altar for his deceased cats at home. Cats appear constantly in his prints: as substitute actors in kabuki scenes, as letter-forms in playful alphabets, as parodies of famous paintings. Government censorship in the 1840s prohibited the depiction of actors and courtesans by name, so Kuniyoshi gave them cat faces, which was technically legal and funnier.
His range was unusual for an ukiyo-e artist. Warriors, landscapes, beautiful women, ghosts, satirical cartoons, cats. He was equally comfortable with the heroic and the absurd, sometimes on the same sheet. His triptych of the giant skeleton spectre, from the tale of Takiyasha the Witch, is one of the most reproduced images in Japanese art.
For the first thirteen years he struggled. The breakthrough came in 1827 with a commission to illustrate the 108 Heroes of the Suikoden, a Chinese adventure novel. He drew tattooed warriors in dynamic poses that broke out of the frame, the tattoos rendered with a detail that started a fashion in Edo. The series was enormously popular and established him as the leading designer of warrior prints.
He loved cats. His studio was always full of them, and he often worked with a kitten tucked inside his kimono. When a cat died, he sent it to a nearby temple, and he kept a Buddhist altar for his deceased cats at home. Cats appear constantly in his prints: as substitute actors in kabuki scenes, as letter-forms in playful alphabets, as parodies of famous paintings. Government censorship in the 1840s prohibited the depiction of actors and courtesans by name, so Kuniyoshi gave them cat faces, which was technically legal and funnier.
His range was unusual for an ukiyo-e artist. Warriors, landscapes, beautiful women, ghosts, satirical cartoons, cats. He was equally comfortable with the heroic and the absurd, sometimes on the same sheet. His triptych of the giant skeleton spectre, from the tale of Takiyasha the Witch, is one of the most reproduced images in Japanese art.
Why Choose Us ?







