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ContributorsUtagawa Kunisada II (Artist) / 歌川 国定 (Artist) / Kiya Sōjirō (Publisher) / 木屋 宗次郎 (Publisher)
Created1864
DescriptionThe onnagata actor, Sawamura Tanosuke, as Shiranui Daijin in the kabuki play Kinoene Soga Daikokubashira 甲子曽我大国柱.
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ContributorsUtagawa Kunisada II (Artist) / 歌川 国定 (Artist) / Tsutaya Kichizō (Publisher) / 蔦屋 吉蔵 (Publisher) / Hori Shōji (Contributor) / 彫 庄治 (Contributor)
Created1852
DescriptionThe kabuki actor Seki Sanjūrō II portrays the character Amazaki Jūichirō Terufumi from the dramatization of the 106-volume 19th century novel, Nansō Satomi Hakkenden 南總里見八犬傳 (The Tale of Eight Dogs), by Kyokutei Bakin.
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ContributorsAdachi Ginkō (Artist) / 安達 吟光 (Artist) / Hasegawa Sumi (Publisher) / 長谷川寿美 (Publisher)
Created1898
Description

The black flag at the upper right corner contains the series name. The scroll at the upper left contains a text description of the print, including the title, Kurofuda (black plank), referring to the black wooden plank to the right of the stage. When a member of the audience needed

The black flag at the upper right corner contains the series name. The scroll at the upper left contains a text description of the print, including the title, Kurofuda (black plank), referring to the black wooden plank to the right of the stage. When a member of the audience needed to be paged, their name would be written on this plank.

This print gives a glimpse into a kabuki theater. A stage assistant beats long wooden clappers (hyoshigi or ki) to accentuate the opening of the curtain and the start of the performance. Another assistant is waiting to strike slightly shorter clappers (tsuke) against a board placed on the floor to emphasize other onstage actions such as running, fighting, or mie (striking a powerful, emotional pose). It also gives a glimpse of the audience and while some appear to be attentive to the action on stage, others are also talking, looking at notes and even entertaining a baby.

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ContributorsAdachi Ginkō (Artist) / 安達 吟光 (Artist) / Hasegawa Sumi (Publisher) / 長谷 寿美 (Publisher)
Created1897
Description

This is one print from a calendar series describing events in Edo Kabuki theater. The black emblem in the top right corner tells the title of the series; the scroll holds text explaining the theatrical event. This print was made during the Meiji period (1868-1912), but stems from a long

This is one print from a calendar series describing events in Edo Kabuki theater. The black emblem in the top right corner tells the title of the series; the scroll holds text explaining the theatrical event. This print was made during the Meiji period (1868-1912), but stems from a long history of calendar printmaking. The title Sashidashi Kantera literally means “reaching-out lantern.” The man on the right is holding a candle with a reflector on a long, flexible bamboo pole to light up the face of the actor.

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ContributorsUtagawa Kunisada II (Artist) / 歌川 国貞 (Artist) / Daikokuya Kinnosuke (Publisher) / 大黒屋 金之助 (Publisher)
Created1867
Description

This print by Kunisada II portrays standing Edo courtesan with a roll of tissues tucked in her obi. There is a calligraphic poetic inscription in the upper left corner.

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ContributorsUtagawa Kunisada II (Artist) / 歌川 国定 (Artist) / Chō Hori (Contributor) / 長彫 (Contributor) / Maruya Kyūshirō (Publisher) / 丸屋久四郎 (Publisher)
Created1864
Description

Triptych by Utagawa Kunisada II depicting a scene from the kabuki play Nise Murasaki Inaka Genji (The Imitation Murasaki and the Rustic Genji), a dramatization of a popular book by Ryūtei Tanehiko 柳亭 種彦 that satirizes the Tale of Genji.