Utagawa Toyokuni I

About Utagawa Toyokuni I

"My pictures are merely something that I draw, and nothing more than that." Toyokuni's self-assessment was modest to the point of dishonesty. He transformed kabuki actor portraiture from stiff formal likenesses into dynamic images of performers in character on stage, and in doing so built the most commercially powerful woodblock print studio in Edo.

He was born in 1769, the son of a puppet maker. He studied under Utagawa Toyoharu, founder of the Utagawa school, and followed convention by taking one syllable of his master's name. His early work synthesised the styles of Utamaro, Eishi and Choki through close study and relentless practice. By the mid-1790s he had found his own voice. Yakusha Butai no Sugatae (Portraits of Actors in Their Various Roles), a series of large polychrome prints produced…

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Courtesan on Stairs - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Courtesan on Stairs - Utagawa Toyokuni I

Print

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The Actor Ichikawa Yaozo III in the Role of Fuwa Banzaemon - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Courtesan Takigawa of the Ōgiya Brothel - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Ōtani Tomoemon in the Role of Ono Sadakurō - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Onoe Matsusuke in the Role of Lady Iwafuji - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Kataoka Nizaemon in Ceremonial Robes of Green and Pink, Drawing His Sword - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Ichikawa Yaozo III in the Role of Fuwa Banzaemon - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Four Seasons in Southern Edo: A Summer Scene - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Courtesan Takigawa of the Ōgiya Brothel - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Ōtani Tomoemon in the Role of Ono Sadakurō - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Picking Clams - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Picking Clams - Utagawa Toyokuni I

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The actor Arashi Ryuzo II as the money lender Ishibe Kinkichi - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Courtesans Promenading on the Nakanochō in Yoshiwara - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Women and an Infant Boy in a Public Bath House - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Kabuki Actor Segawa Kikunojō III in a Mad Female Role - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Kabuki Actors: Bando Mitsugorō and Iwai Hanshirō - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Ichikawa Komazō II as Akaneya Hanshichi - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Famous Beauty Escorted by Women of Different Rank - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Four Women Passing a Group of Trees - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The First Visit of the Cuckoo - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Onoe Matsusuke as the Ghost of the Murdered Wife Oiwa, in _A Tale of Horror from the Yotsuya Station on the Tokaido Road_ - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Scene from a Drama - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Scene from a Drama - Utagawa Toyokuni I

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Ichikawa Komazō II in the Role of Akaneya Hanshichi from the Play Hadesugata On'a Maiginu - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actor Segawa Roko as the Woodseller Ohara Leading an Ox - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Actor Nakamura Utayemon with Two Women Preparing for the New Year Ceremony - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Representation of the Dance-Play _Dōjōji_ - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Two Women in a Boat; One Holding a Basket of Mussels - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Print of a Kabuki Dancer from the Maiden of the Dōjōji Temple (Musume Dōjōji) - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
An Actor Beside Water - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
An Actor Beside Water - Utagawa Toyokuni I

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Ichikawa Komazō III in the Role of Kameō with Iwai Kumesaburō in the Role of Kameō's Wife, Oyasu, from the Play Shunkan futatsu omokage - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Women on a Veranda - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Women on a Veranda - Utagawa Toyokuni I

Print

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The Geisha To’e as a Vendor of Poems, from the series Gion Festival Costume Parade (Gion mikoshi arai nerimono sugata) - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Ushiwaka-maru in Armour - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Actors Sawamura Sōjūrō III holding Sword Aloft, and Arashi Shichigorō III as Fighting Heroes - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Nakamura Nakazo II as Matsuo-maru - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Fourth Month - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
The Fourth Month - Utagawa Toyokuni I

Print

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Scene from an Unidentified Drama - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Two Young Women Playing a Game of Sugoroku - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Bandō Minosuke (Mitsugorō III) in the Role of a Young Samurai - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Bandō Hikosaburō III in the Role of Sugawara no Michizane - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Women at Takanawa Beach - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
On Shinagawa Beach at Ebb-Tide - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Women Parading in an Imitation of the Cortege of a Daimyo - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Chofu no Tamagawa - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Chofu no Tamagawa - Utagawa Toyokuni I

Print

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New Year's Celebration in a Large Mansion - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Along the Seashore at Futami - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Act I of the Drama "Sugawara" - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Courtesan or Actor as Courtesan Pouring Tea by the Light of a Lantern - Utagawa Toyokuni I - Poster
Utagawa Toyokuni I

Utagawa Toyokuni I

"My pictures are merely something that I draw, and nothing more than that." Toyokuni's self-assessment was modest to the point of dishonesty. He transformed kabuki actor portraiture from stiff formal likenesses into dynamic images of performers in character on stage, and in doing so built the most commercially powerful woodblock print studio in Edo. He was born in 1769, the son of a puppet maker. He studied under Utagawa Toyoharu, founder of the Utagawa school, and followed convention by taking one syllable of his master's name. His early work synthesised the styles of Utamaro, Eishi and Choki through close study and relentless practice. By the mid-1790s he had found his own voice. Yakusha Butai no Sugatae (Portraits of Actors in Their Various Roles), a series of large polychrome prints produced between 1794 and 1796, showed kabuki actors costumed and posed on stage rather than seated in formal dress. The series was a commercial triumph and set the standard for actor portraiture for the next generation. He also excelled at bijin-ga, pictures of beautiful women, establishing compositions that ukiyo-e artists followed for decades. His innovations extended to format: he pioneered the use of diptych, triptych and polyptych arrangements that allowed more complex narrative compositions than the single sheet could hold. As demand surged, Toyokuni's studio expanded until his personal involvement in each print became nominal. The quality of his later work declined, but the school he built survived him. His two most gifted pupils, Kunisada and Kuniyoshi, became major figures in their own right, and the Utagawa school dominated ukiyo-e production through the final decades of the Edo period. He died in 1825.