Japanese Woodblock Prints. Andreas Marks
Act. c. 1755–90
Family name: Mori. Art name: Ippitsusai.
Not many details are known about Bunchō’s life. He was a book illustrator, painter, and print designer and is believed to have studied painting under the minor Kanō school painter Ishikawa Yukimoto (mid-eighteenth century). His earliest known works are the illustrations to the book Eiga asobi nidai otoko from 1755, written by Hachimonji Jishō II (1738–1815).
Bunchō predominantely designed actor prints in the narrow hosoban format of which the vast majority were produced between 1766 and 1774. These actor portraits are less aggressive and vigorous than portraits by his contemporary Katsukawa Shunshō, who was the foremost designer of actor prints in that time period. Bunchō’s beautiful women like in the two half-length series “Eight Views of the East” (Azuma hakkei) and “Appearance of the Eight Views” (Sugata hakkei), on the other hand, show the influence of Suzuki Harunobu but do not appear as romantic and fragile as Harunobu’s.
Nishimuraya Yohachi was the leading publisher of Bunchō’s prints. His most important work, however, was published by Kariganeya Ihei in 1770. The three-volume “Picture-book of Stage Fans” (Ehon butai ōgi) was produced with Katsukawa Shunshō. In an—until that time—unique compositional format, it shows the leading actors of the day on fans and is therefore considered one of the most important books in Japanese woodblock printing. These yakusha nigao-e (“pictures of likenesses of actors”) challenged the dominance of the Torii School in theatre illustrations. Bunchō captured actors in female roles (onnagata) whereas Shunshō drew the villains.
By 1772, Bunchō stopped designing actor prints and concentrated on pictures of beautiful women, a genre that he had already pursued in 1769. Bunchō’s last known work is a “pictorial calendar” (egoyomi) from 1790. Amongst his few students was Kishi Bunshō (1754–96).
1768 The actor ōtani Hiroji III in an unidentified role in the play Shuen Soga ōmugaeshi, Ichimura Theater, II/1768. Hosoban nishiki-e. Collection Peter Rieder. Hayashi 1981, no. 120.
Bunchō and Harunobu. c.1769-70 Imaginary armor pulling incident. Chūban. Library of Congress. Suzuki 1979, no. 368, and Hayashi 1981, no. 340.
1770 The actors Ichikawa Komazō II as Hanamori Kisaku and Yamashita Kinsaku II as Oume in the play Nue no mori ichiyō no mato, Nakamura Theater, XI/1770. Chūban. National Museum of Ethnology, Leiden, The Netherlands. Hayashi 1981, no. 252.
1770 The actor Sanogawa Ichimatsu II, from the “Picture-book of Stage Fans” (Ehon butai ōgi), vol. 1, p. 26. 16.7 x 25.9 cm (6.6 x 10.2 in.). Publisher: Kariganeya Ihei. Library of Congress.
late 1760s The actor ōtani Hiroji III in an unidentified role. Hosoban nishiki-e. National Museum of Ethnology, Leiden, The Netherlands. Unlisted in Hayashi 1981.
Shunshō
1726–1793
Given names: Yōsuke, Yūsuke (from 1774). Art surname: Katsukawa. Art names on paintings: Jūgasei, Kyokurōsai, Kyokurōsei, Ririn, Rokurokuan, Yūji. Jar-shaped seal with the character “rin” (grove).
Born presumably in 1726, Shunshō initially studied painting under Katsukawa Shunsui (act. c.1744–64) and the Hanabusa school painter Kō Sūkoku (1730–1804). His earliest known prints date from 1764 when he was nearly forty years old. Together with Bunchō he played the central role in the development of realistic portrayal of actors. Most important are their illustrations in the book “A Picture-book of Stage Fans” (Ehon butai ōgi) from 1770. The novel half-length portraits of actors in fan shapes was an approach that was continued by Shunshō in his celebrated series “Fans of the East” (Azuma ōgi: 1775–82).
After Bunchō ceased to design actor prints in the 1770s, Shunshō became pre-eminent in this field, providing more realistic portraits that emphasize the individual characters of the actors. Overall, he designed several hundred actor prints in the small, narrow hosoban format, sometimes composed as diptychs, triptychs, or even pentaptychs.
Shunshō was active in other genres as well, working for at least 18 different publishers. His early beauties like the series “Eight Views of Fukagawa” (Fukagawa hakkei) are strongly influenced by Harunobu. Around 1772 he collaborated with Shigemasa in producing the chūban-size series “Silkworm Cultivation” (Kaiko yashinai gusa). From c.1772–73 date forty-eight chūban-format designs of the first full-color print series illustrating the “Tales of Ise” (Ise monogatari). At the top of each print is a stylized cloud border, enclosing the poem from the depicted episode.
Shunshō created several portraits of sumo wrestlers. Until his death, Shunshō continued to illustrate books and also produced several erotica. In 1776, again in collaboration with Shigemasa, he illustrated the book “Mirror of Competing Beauties of the Green Houses” (Seirō bijin awase sugata kagami). Of the more than one hundred paintings known by him, the earliest is dated to c.1779–80. As head of the Katsukawa school, Shunshō had many students, including Shunkō, Shun’ei, Shunzan, Shundō, and Shunrō (who later changed his name to Katsushika Hokusai).
Shunshō passed away aged 67 on the eighth day of the twelfth month 1792, which corresponds to January 19, 1793 in the modern calendar. He is burried at Matsudaira Saifukuji, Asakusa, today located in Tokyo’s Taitō ward.
Early 1770s The actors Nakamura Sukegorō II and Segawa Kikunojō II in unidentified roles. Hosoban nishiki-e. Asian Art Museum, National Museums in Berlin.
1768 The actors ōtani Hiroji III as Kameō and Sakata Sajūrō I as Ariō in the play Hime Komatsu ne no hi no asobi, Ichimura Theater, IX/1768. Hosoban nishiki-e. Asian Art Museum, National Museums in Berlin.
c.1772–73 “The Syllable Yo”, from the series “Tales of Ise in Fashionable Brocade Prints” (Fūryū nishiki-e Ise monogatari). Chūban. Collection Peter Rieder.
late 1770s The actor Nakamura Rikō I in an unidentified role. (Left sheet of a diptych, right sheet shows the actor ōtani Tomoemon I). Hosoban nishiki-e. Asian Art Museum, National Museums in Berlin.
1770 The actor Ichikawa Danzō IV, from the “Picture-book of Stage Fans” (Ehon butai ōgi), vol. 2, p. 19. 16.7 x 25.9 cm (6.6 x 10.2 in.). Publisher: Kariganeya Ihei. Library of Congress.
c.1786 West Division—The sumo wrestlers Sekinoto Hachirōji and Dewanoumi Kinzō. Ōban. Collection Peter Rieder.
1776 The actor Ichikawa Danjūrō V as the spirit of the old woman Higaki in the play Sugata no hana yuki no kuronushi, Ichimura Theater, XI/1776. Hosoban nishiki-e. Asian Art Museum, National Museums in Berlin.