Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • Visit
  • Exhibitions & Events
  • Art & Design
  • Give
  • Search

Visit Main Menu Block

  • Hours & Admission
  • Accessibility & Amenities
  • Tours & Group Visits
  • Visitor Guidelines

Exhibitions and Events Main Menu Block

  • Exhibitions
  • Events

Art and Design Main Menu Block

  • Collection
  • Collection Research
  • Past Exhibitions
  • Watch / Listen / Read

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum
Yanagawa Shigenobu, White Horse, Edo (Japanese period). Gift of George Pierce Metcalf

Marking the Occasion

The Japanese Tradition of Surimono
February 3 - May 28, 2006
Yanagawa Shigenobu, White Horse, Edo (Japanese period). Gift of George Pierce Metcalf

Introduction

Surimono (literally "printed objects") are distinguished from polychrome woodblock prints by the presence of a variety of texts integrated into their overall compositions. Privately commissioned and published as announcements, commemorations, or most often as New Year's greetings with poems, surimono exhibit elaborate printing and embossing techniques and the application of metallic dusts and colors on thick paper. The specialized division of labor common in the Japanese woodblock printing process was sometimes overlooked, as painters and poets designed prints and printers both carved and printed their designs.

The link between text and image in surimono is an important one. By the early 19th century, when most of these objects were made, the image and the accompanying poem were conceived together in what is now regarded as the characteristic format. Whether the poetry referred directly to the visual subject of the print or played upon it through word puns and allusions, the artwork was always infused with meaning and a sensuous beauty meant to be savored and enjoyed by its educated recipient.

Many of the selections in this exhibition are from a group of 88 prints presented to the Museum as a donation by George Pierce Metcalf in 1956. The group came from a single Osaka album, one of at least two that were presented as parting gifts to Raphael Pumpelly, a well-known geologist, during his travels in Japan in 1862-63, soon after that country opened its doors to the West. Not only are these some of the earliest prints to leave Japan, but the album's unique association with Osaka is confirmed through the inclusion of Osaka poets and printmakers whose works are not as well known as those from Edo (modern Tokyo). The numerous kyoka ("mad verse") poems by Tsurunoya Osamaru (d. 1839) and members of his circle, as well as the appearance of a tsuru ("crane") seal on many of the prints, make it clear that his patronage and that of his fellow poets provided the impetus for the creation of many of these works.

The RISD Museum of Art gratefully acknowledges the research of Dr. Roger S. Keyes, who has studied and published many of the works on exhibition here.

Deborah Del Gais

Related Objects

Yashima Gakutei 八島岳亭

Minamoto no Yoritomo with a Crane, Edo (Japanese period)

Unknown Maker, Japanese

Turtle Inro with Sake Cup Netsuke
Woodblock print of tan leaves covering rice cakes below columns of calligraphy.

Nagayama Kōin 長山孔寅

Cakes Wrapped in Oak Leaves, Edo Period
A still life with a patterned pouch, books, and a white and blue porcelain planter of flowers beneath columns of calligraphy.

Ryūryūkyo Shinsai 柳々居辰斎

Turtle Netsuke and Inro with Potted Plant and Books, Edo Period

Ryūryūkyo Shinsai 柳々居辰斎

Fan Boxes, and Cloth, Edo Period

Mori Shunkei 森春渓

Camellia and narcissus (Tsubaki to suisen), Edo (Japanese period)

Katsushika Hokusai 葛飾北斎

Hatakeyama Shigetada Carrying a Horse, Edo Period

Jukōdō Yoshikumi

Actors passing Mount Fuji between the Yoshiwara and Hara stations on the Tokaido (Yakusha dochu yoshiwara hara fuji enbo), Edo (Japanese period)

Marking the Occasion : The Japanese Tradition of Surimono

February 3 - May 28, 2006
Download Checklist pdf

/

Download

Footer Main

  • Become a Member
  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Rent the Museum

Footer Main Navigation

  • Visit

    • Hours & Admission
    • Accessibility & Amenities
    • Tours & Group Visits
    • Visitor Guidelines
  • Art & Design

    • Collection Research
    • Collection
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Join / Give

    • Become a Member
    • Give
  • Exhibitions & Events

    • Exhibitions
    • Events
  • Watch / Listen / Read

    • The Latest
    • Publications
    • Articles
    • Audio & Video

Footer Secondary Navigation

  • Who We Are
  • Opportunities
  • Image Request
  • Press Office
  • Rent the Museum
  • Terms of Use
Tickets
Homepage
Go to the risd.edu homepage. This link will open in a new window.