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The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro (2 Volume Set)
 
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The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro (2 Volume Set) [Paperback]

Shugo Asano , Timothy Clark , Kitagawa Utamaro


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Kitagawa Utamaro (?1754-1806) is the pivotal artist of the Ukiyo-e school. His sensuous and sharp-witted portrayal of women in all walks of life both celebrate and comment on those of the "Floating World". Discovered early in his career, Utamaro was soon collaborating with the leading writers of the 1790s. The culmination was a sequence of deluxe poetry anthologies, which he illustrated in colour woodblock with figure and nature subjects and erotic scenes. In the 1790s Utamaro transformed the style of Ukiyo-e art with his prolific ouput of print series: often portraits in the new bust and half-length formats. High-ranked courtesans, lovers from literature and ordinary domestic scenes - all these themes are explored. Boastful of his talents, Utamaro finally came into collision with the feudal authorities, suffering house arrest that accelerated his artistic decline and led to his death. This text is published to accompany a British Museum exhibition in two parts, organized with the Chiba City Museum, Japan. The work includes rare surviving hanging scroll paintings, wood-block prints in complete series and all of Utamaro's illustrated books. The introductory essays and catalogue appear both in English and Japanese.

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Japanese Art, International Appeal 21 Sep 2000
By Laura Wolfram - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro is a catalogue of an exhibition of the work of Utamaro held at the British Museum in London and the Chiba City Museum of Art in Japan. The catalogue is bilingual; all text appears in both English and Japanese.

The book comprises two volumes, the first of which contains a number of essays and a listing of the works appearing in the exhibition. The list divides Utamaro's oeuvre into several categories: signatures and seals, paintings, woodblock prints, and illustrated books. Within each of these categories, the works are listed in roughly chronological order. Each item is accompanied by a small black and white reproduction as well as a short commentary which gives the reader some contextual background on figures, objects, and inscriptions which appear in the work. The commentary is by no means comprehensive, but it does provide some basic information for a reader or viewer who might not be familiar with Edo art and culture.

In the second volume of the catalogue, each work discussed in the first appears in full color. Most of the reproductions are given either half or a quarter of a page, though a number of pictures occupy an entire page. Interestingly, almost all of the full page reproductions portray women, many of them in a state of semi-undress, with bare breasts or legs peeking through their kimonos. The preeminence given to these women, as well as the use of the word "passionate" in the catalogue's title, implies that the emphasis of this exhibition is on the erotic aspect of Utamaro's work. In the eyes of Asano and Clark, Utamaro's insects, actor prints, and landscape pictures are quite clearly secondary in importance to the bijinga. While this emphasis on the bijinga prints may not seem surprising, given that this is the subject of a large portion of Utamaro's work, I suspect that the treatment of these bijinga prints also has to do with the fact that the organizers of the exhibition wish to emphasize the universal appeal of Utamaro's work. In their introductory notes to the catalogue, the director of the British Museum, the mayor of Chiba City, and the representative of Asahi Shimbun, one of the major organizers of this exhibition, mention the goal of "international cultural exchange." One of the major goals of the exhibition in London, it seems, was to re-introduce European viewers to the prints which had gained so much popularity there in the nineteenth century. In his essay in the beginning of vol. 1, Nobuo Tsuji explains that the exhibition, in his view, should present the "universal as opposed to the exotic appeal" of Utamaro's work. And what could be more universal, more cross-culturally comprehensible, than sex appeal? We all understand sex. Regardless of how referentially opaque certain actor prints or illustrated poems may be to a western audience, most viewers can on some level relate to the image of an alluring woman.

Thanks to the catalogue's softcover binding, the book is flexible enough to allow one to view each page flat, meaning that the pages are less likely to catch the glare from the lights which often annoys readers of books with glossy prints. The reproductions are of good quality, with very few works printed too small for the reader to be able to discern their content. Overall, Asano and Clark's catalogue seems quite comprehensive and well put together. While the preeminence of Utamaro's beautiful women on the one hand de-emphasizes slightly his other subjects, it also serves to unify the catalogue and bring to the foreground an area in which Utamaro truly excelled.


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