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Expanding the Surface

Multiple-Panel Prints in Edo-Period Japan
September 8 - December 10, 2006

Introduction

In Edo-period Japan (1603-1867), printmaking was a serious commercial venture as well as an artistic undertaking. In the printer's workshop, speed and efficiency were essential for cost-effective production. To facilitate this process, images were usually printed from a set of carved woodblocks of the same size onto a standard-size sheet of paper. These precut sheets were cut from larger standard-size sheets, making the process of paper production simpler. Toward the end of the 18th century, artists began to combine two or more sheets to expand the surface area available for their compositions. This innovation made possible sweeping designs of panoramic landscape views and more elaborate figural arrangements.The examples in this gallery illustrate how Japanese printmakers learned to manipulate the multiple-panel format to unify and dramatize their subjects. Most striking, of course, are the two vertical prints, both by Kunichika. The Toyohiro pentatych (five-panel print) exhibited in the case is a much earlier experiment in a horizontal multipaneled format. Contemporary with Toyohiro's small-scale panoramic view is Eizan's Fashionable Winding-Water Banquet, which creates a sense of deep spatial recession. Shigekatsu isolates each of his three kabuki actors within a single panel, utilizing a typical compositional device to monumentalize them against a plain background. In yet another compositional variation, Eisen's triptych depicts a densely crowded street scene, where the perspective frames and emphasizes recession into space. Landscape subjects were effective on the grander scale as well. The visual impact of these powerful designs is a clear indication of the resilience and creativity of Japanese printmakers. This exhibition is a telling example of how these artists constantly revitalized their tradition through innovations in format, composition, and subject.

Deborah Del Gais

Related Objects

Yashima Gakutei 八島岳亭

Doll on a Stand, Edo Period

Utagawa Hiroshige 歌川広重

Iris garden at Horikiri (堀切の花菖蒲 Horikiri no hanashōbu), Edo Period

Toyohara Chikanobu 豊原周延

Battle at Shizugatake: Katō Toranosuke and Yamaji Shōgen (Shizugatake kassen: Katō Toranosuke Yamaji Shōgen), Meiji

Shun'yōsai Shunshi

Scrapbook album of Onoe Tamizô II of Osaka (nidai Onoe Tamizô) (1799-1886), Edo Period

Toyohara Kunichika 豊原国周

The Mansion of Plates and the Cursed Makeup Mirror (皿屋敷化粧姿鏡 Sarayashiki keshō no sugatami), Meiji

Toyohara Chikanobu 豊原周延

Tea Ceremony with Flower Arranging in Turn (茶の湯回り花 Chanoyu mawaribana), Meiji
A colorfully decorated round jar, the top sealed with fabric, below columns of calligraphic text and the edge of furniture on right.

Yashima Gakutei 八島岳亭

Glass Wine Jar, Edo Period

Utagawa Kunimasa

The scene of the steamship sinking off the coast of Kii Province: the actors Ichikawa DanjuroIX as Kyoshi Kondo Tatsuo and Ichikawa Sadanji as Mikura Tomizo, Edo (Japanese period)

Expanding the Surface : Multiple-Panel Prints in Edo-Period Japan

September 8 - December 10, 2006
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