- More explicit depictions were an important part of the work of erotic illustrators such as 蒬ouard-Henri Avril, Franz von Bayros, Martin van Ma雔e, shunga ", including the work of such masters as Utamaro, Hokusai, Katsukawa ShunchM, Utagawa Kunisada, Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Yanagawa Shigenobu, Keisai Eisen, and Kawanabe KyMsai.
- Twenty-one notable artists of the Ukiyo-e era, led by Utagawa Kunisada [ Utagawa Toyokuni III ], designed the full complement of prints for the Edo-no-Hana Meisho-e series . as well as the huge number of contributing illustrators, that distinguishes the project as one of the most significant artist collaborations completed within Japan s greater art history.
- In particular it presents a progressive generous quality to the nature of Utagawa Kunisada and exhibits rare works created by him in his final days . Recognising Utagawa Kunisada as the senior artist of the series, it is important to note that print sections of a similar size to his own, designed by comparatively junior artists, were displayed on the same sheet as if created by equals.
- In particular it presents a progressive generous quality to the nature of Utagawa Kunisada and exhibits rare works created by him in his final days . Recognising Utagawa Kunisada as the senior artist of the series, it is important to note that print sections of a similar size to his own, designed by comparatively junior artists, were displayed on the same sheet as if created by equals.
- "' Fan print with two bugaku dancers "'is an " ukiyo-e " woodblock print dating to sometime between the mid 1820s and 1844 by celebrated Edo period artist Utagawa Kunisada, also known as Toyokuni III . This print is simultaneously an example of the " uchiwa-e " ( fan print ) and " aizuri-e " ( monochromatic blue print ) genres.
- This image is gorgeous, but the TIFF is so huge ( 500megs ) that my computer cannot compress it into a JPG . ( By the way, the three downloadable component images do not totally line up-- they're like a quarter degree rotated-- so really it would be best to go from the ginormous all-in-one triptych file . ) It could go in a lot of articles, such as Tale of the Genji, Woodblock printing in Japan, Utagawa Kunisada and Utagawa Hiroshige, etc . Can someone else with a better computer upload this image?