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Edo Culture II

Life in the Pleasure Quarters
December 16, 1994 - March 5, 1995

Introduction

During the Edo period (1600-1868), the ruling Tokugawa shoguns attempted to control public morals and provide personal security by creating entertainment districts in which prostitution was licensed. In the Tokugawa capital at Edo (modern-day Tokyo), the Yoshiwara district was the government-regulated area in which the courtesans conducted their business.

At the height of its glory during the eighteenth century, the Yoshiwara was the source for an elaborate subculture of dress, manners, behavior, and even of literary forms, all of which gradually influenced Edo culture as a whole. As social institutions, then, the Yoshiwara (and other well-known entertainment quarters in cities such as Kyoto and Osaka) had a profound influence on artistic and intellectual thought and social customs of the period.

The prints in this exhibition are mostly drawn from the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and demonstrate the continuing popularity of the courtesan image even into the time of the Yoshiwara's decline. In some, courtesans are presented in the role of great figures from the past, such as literary heroes and poetesses, demonstrating how this subculture transformed traditional literary imagery and inserted an element of social commentary or parody (mitate-e). Others are straightforward depictions of daily activities, like dressing in the elaborate costumes that came to be associated with this profession and entertaining guests in the teahouses and houses of assignation that filled the Yoshiwara. The Sumida River scenes illustrate the association of the Yoshiwara with its suburban setting and the use of pleasure boats to transport clients to its location on the outskirts of the city.

Related Objects

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Bush-Clover Garden Ryoganji, Mimeguri Shrine (Hagi no niwa: Ryoganji Mimeguri), Edo (Japanese period)

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Evening snow at a boathouse (Ofunagura no bosetsu), Edo (Japanese period)
No Image Available

Kikugawa Eizan 菊川英山

Three fashionable beauties enjoying the evening cool, Edo (Japanese period)
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Kikugawa Eizan 菊川英山

Three fashionable beauties enjoying the evening cool, Edo (Japanese period)
Woodblock print of two light-skinned women dressed in pink earth-toned garments engaged in conversation. The woman on the left is holding a circular tray of sushi on her shoulders.

Kikugawa Eizan 菊川英山

Two Women with a Tray of Sushi, Edo Period

Utagawa Hiroshige 歌川広重

Dawn inside the Yoshiwara, Edo (Japanese period)

Utagawa Toyokuni II (Toyoshige)

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Torii Kiyonaga

Bush-clover garden Ryoganji, Mimeguri Shrine, Edo (Japanese period)

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