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A Japanese print of a ghostly figure with long black hair hovering at the center pf the print, holding a baby and looking down. The figure is tethered to a tied cloth hanging to its right.
Utagawa Kunisada 歌川 国貞 (Toyokuni III), Onoe Kikugoro in the role of the ghost Kasane (尾上菊五郎 かさねゆうこん Onoe Kikugoro: Kasane yūkon), Edo Period. Helen M. Danforth Acquisition Fund

Defying Boundaries

Women in Japanese Art
April 27 - November 4, 2024
A Japanese print of a ghostly figure with long black hair hovering at the center pf the print, holding a baby and looking down. The figure is tethered to a tied cloth hanging to its right.
Utagawa Kunisada 歌川 国貞 (Toyokuni III), Onoe Kikugoro in the role of the ghost Kasane (尾上菊五郎 かさねゆうこん Onoe Kikugoro: Kasane yūkon), Edo Period. Helen M. Danforth Acquisition Fund

Introduction

This exhibition addresses often-overlooked histories and stories of women in Japanese art. Marginalized in modern and historical accounts that focused on men, these women were nevertheless very much present in Japanese visual culture. From warriors and poets memorialized in prints to pioneering Japanese artists, these works offer glimpses of those who broke boundaries and inspired generations of artists and illustrators.

Also portrayed in this exhibition are famous performers of female roles, or onnagata 女方. When women were banned from acting in the Kabuki theater in 1629, some male actors began specializing in women’s parts, redefining the concept of femininity in their time. Female impersonators became arbiters of style and models of femininity, both onstage and offstage. 

–Wai Yee Chiong, curator of Asian art

Wai Yee Chiong, curator of Asian art

RISD Museum is supported by a grant from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts, through an appropriation by the Rhode Island General Assembly and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and with the generous partnership of the Rhode Island School of Design, its Board of Trustees, and Museum Governors.

Exhibition images

Selected Objects

Natori Shunsen 名取春仙

Actor Nakamura Fukusuke V as Ohan, Showa
Japanese print of a woman, wearing a white floral-patterned blue robe with an orange and white geometric hem, staring at a black-beaked white bird to the left of her.

Utagawa Toyokuni 歌川豊国

Parrot Komachi (あふむ小まち Ōmu Komachi), Edo Period
Japanese print of a woman, with floor-length black hair, wearing a white robe, facing a gray, winged creature under a crescent moon. The woman sits beneath an open orange robe.

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi 月岡芳年

Iga no Tsubone: Midnight moon Mount Yoshino (吉野山夜半月 伊賀局 Yoshinoyama yahan tsuki: Iga no Tsubone), Meiji
A Japanese print of a ghostly figure with long black hair hovering at the center pf the print, holding a baby and looking down. The figure is tethered to a tied cloth hanging to its right.

Utagawa Kunisada 歌川 国貞 (Toyokuni III)

Onoe Kikugoro in the role of the ghost Kasane (尾上菊五郎 かさねゆうこん Onoe Kikugoro: Kasane yūkon), Edo Period
Japanese print of a woman, wearing a tree-like headpiece and a floor-length orange robe with wheel and flower motifs, looking down at the yellow smoke that surrounds her top half.

Chōbunsai Eishi 鳥文斎栄之

A Triptych of Fashionable Disguises: The Third Princess (略三幅対 女三之宮 Yatsushi sanpukutsui: Nyosan no Miya), Edo Period
Japanese print of two sitting figures, facing each other, holding fans and wearing colorful patterned robes against a blue ombre background. The left figure sits on a tan bamboo trunk.

Utagawa Kunisada 歌川 国貞 (Toyokuni III)

Visiting Komachi (かよひ小町 Kayoi Komachi), Edo Period
Photo of a box and various peace-themed items, including: a stamp, keychain, pin, and flyers that read “War is Over,” “Spread Peace,” “Light House,” and “Imagine Peace.” The box top reads “Imagine Peace” and box base has blue tissue paper inside.

Yokō Ono 小野洋子

Imagine Peace
Japanese print of a woman, standing beneath a partially exposed umbrella, wearing a layered orange and white robe with platform shoes, and carrying a long, folded, patterned orange fabric.

Katsukawa Shunshō 勝川春章

The actor Segawa Kikunojo III in a female role , Edo Period
  • More objects +

Exhibition Checklist

Defying Boundaries : Women in Japanese Art

April 27 - November 4, 2024
View Checklist pdf
View Checklist pdf
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