Showing posts with label Ukiyo-e. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukiyo-e. Show all posts

Monday, March 5, 2012

Summer in Japan

Summer in Japan is one of the most exciting times to be here.  It is also one of the most difficult.  The summer season has the largest variety of activities to do; for it is when many of the festivals occur and the mountains and beaches open for the season.  It can be one of the most difficult times due to the weather.  For 3-4 months, the weather reaches tropical rainforest like levels, being over 100 degrees and 100% humidity every day.  While almost everywhere has lots of air conditioning, outside can be unpleasant.  I think the excitement of the season and all of the activities available make it a very worthwhile time to be in Japan.

Summer in Japan starts in late June, as soon as the rains of the Rainy Season end and it gets really hot out.  Although in recent years, this has been changing as the rainy season doesn't rain as much as it used to and things get hotter sooner.  The end of the summer season is in early September, when the beach and mountains close and kids return to school, but in terms of climate, the heat of summer can last more than a month longer than this.  This makes for at least the weather of summer to last from late-June to early to mid-October.

Summer is the time to go to the mountains and beaches as they open for the season.  This usually occurs from the beginning of July to the end of August for the mountains and the beginning of July to Obon (August 15th) for the beaches, because of the jellyfish that come after this.  The beaches and smaller mountains are really open all year, but most Japanese don't go out of season.  The larger mountains really are closed though in the off-season, specifically Mt. Fuji where the huts that cater to climbers of the mountain are closed and the rest of the year is also very dangerous to attempt climbing for any amateurs.  If you are planning to climb Mt. Fuji, you should plan your trip for the summer months, specifically during the open season.

Japan has a wide variety of other interesting things that are associated with summer.  The most obvious one being semi (蝉).  Semi are cicadas and one of the biggest things associated with summer here in Japan.  Which if you have ever been here in summer, is really obvious to see why.  The whole summer of Japan is filled with the screeching of cicada.  In the beginning, I wasn't ready for how loud they were and sometimes thought areas were filled with loud birds, until I realized (or remember again now) that this is the cicadas' work.  In areas with lots of trees, they can be especially deafening.  I also think they're a bit larger here than back home.

Another interesting aspect about Japan's summers is the popularity of horror at this time.  While in many places, the popular time for scary things is around Halloween, for Japan it's summer.  It is a long running belief in Japan that being scared is cooling.  So in Japan, it is popular for scary things and to be scared during the summer.  In the past, this was done by hanging Ukiyo-e prints of monsters, ghosts or other scary subjects.  The subject matter of these prints are often of Kaidan (怪談).  Kaidan, or Kwaidan are the traditional ghost stories and scary folktales of historic Japan.  Most of them refer to traditional tales that have been passed down for generations and incorporate the geographic, historic and political elements of the region that they come from. [1]

These tales or Kaidan became very popular during the Edo Era, when a game called Hyakumonogatari Kaidankai (百物語怪談会), or "Gathering of One Hundred Supernatural Tales" became popular. [2]  The game was played in the nights of summer, where 100 candles would be lit in a circle.  Players would then tell a ghost story and after telling it would extinguish one of the candles.  The extinguishing of the candles were thought to draw spiritual energy, until the last candle extinguished would cause an apparition to appear. [3]  As the popularity spread, books comprising of these Kaidan were put together to help players of the game to be able to remember more of them for the game.  Authors of these books also searched among the remote places of Japan for new tales, recording many of these local tales for the first time.  The Kaidan that were linked to important historical events were also depicted in the Noh and Bunraku plays of this time, making them classics and well known throughout Japan.  These tales became known to the west, first through the writings of Lafcadio Hearn in his book, Kwaidan: Stories and Studies of Strange Things written in 1904. [4]  Lafcadio Hearn is famous for being one of the earliest writers of Japan and Japanese culture for western audiences.  Coming to Japan in 1890 for a newspaper assignment, he would stay in Japan for the rest of his life writing and teaching English in Japan until his death in 1904.  His most famous work being his first work of Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan which he describes his first experiences in Japan in. [5]  These stories becoming well-known, also became the subject matter of the Ukiyo-e prints covering scary subject matter.

Kuniyoshi Utagawa's Mitsukuni Defying the Skeleton Spectre Invoked by Princess Takiyasha. [6] 

Yoshitoshi Tsukioka, Ōya Tarō Mitsukuni.  From the same story as the Ukiyo-e above. [7]    

Katsushika Hokusai's The Ghost of Oiwa, from "One Hundred Stories." [8]

Katsushika Hokusai's Kohada Koheiji, from "One Hundred Stories." [9]

Now, most of Japan's horror films are released during the summer, filling this role.

The biggest and most exciting part about summer are the festivals.  Many of Japan's biggest and most famous festivals are held in the summer.  For example, 2 of Japan's 'Three Great Festivals' are held in the summer and all 3 of the 'Three Great Festivals of Tohoku' are held in the summer, these even being the same week of the first week of August.  Both the 'Three Great Festivals' and the 'Three Great Festivals of Tohoku' are Top 3, which I talked about in my last post about Tanabata.  These are: Gion Matsuri in Kyoto, Tenjin Matsuri in Osaka and the Nebuta Matsuri in Aomori, the Kanto Matsuri in Akita and the Tanabata Matsuri in Tanabata.  Besides these big ones, many areas hold their festivals in the summer.  So even while you could find a festival in Japan on almost every day of the year already, the summer become even more packed and you often have to choose between a few options every weekend (and on the weekdays as well).  For example, I really like the international food and culture festivals that happen just about every weekend in the summer to early fall at Yoyogi Park.  Another hugely popular summer past-time are the many firework festivals held all over Japan.

Besides the other festivals, the local firework festivals are a special time in summer when people bring popular food and drinks, many people donning traditional yukata and head to the river banks or spot of the fireworks to picnic, party and watch the fireworks.  These fireworks have been a popular activity since their introduction from China in the 16th century.  The Japanese also have their own firework invention, the Warimono which are also used in the festivals.  The Warimono are the fireworks that explode into the huge circles of sparks, made to represent different flowers.  These flowers include the chrysanthemum, wisteria, plum blossoms, cherry blossoms and others. [10]  These firework shows put almost all of ours back in the U.S. to shame.  The shows here are like the climax of normal firework shows, if they lasted for an hour instead.  Some of the most famous ones are the fireworks on the banks of the Sumigawa River in Tokyo and Nagaoka Festival on the banks of the Shinano River in Niigata.

The fireworks at the Sumidagawa Hanabi Taikai, "Sumida River Firework Festival," in Tokyo on August 14th, 2010.

The Nagaoka Firework Festival is held the 2nd and 3rd of August every year.  This fireworks show is famous for its huge fireworks, as well as the number launched during the festival.  The biggest of these is called the Sanjakudama, which is a 300 kilogram shell and explodes to 600 meters in diameter. [11]

The Sanjakudama in action.  The fireworks below are the size of the usual large ones. [12] 

Summer also has the 2nd most important holiday for Japanese people of Obon.  Obon (お盆) is an important religious festival held on August 15th for the Japanese.  At this time, the ancestors' spirits are supposed to return to the family home.  People all over Japan often return to their family and ancestral home at this time to be with family and to participate in the traditions revolving around the preparations and rituals of this important festival.  The main traditions are the: Haka Maini, Bon Odori, Mukaebi, Okuribi and Shōrō Nagashi.  Haka Mmairi is the visiting of the graves of the ancestors, which are then cleaned up for the Bon Festival.  The main point of Obon is to properly welcome and send off the spirits of their ancestors that come back to the ancestral home at this time.  This is done by the other traditional practices. [13]


Mukaebi is the lighting of fires to guide and welcome the returning souls.  This welcome is further enhanced by the Bon Odori, or the Bon Dance.  The Bon Dance is a traditional folk dance in the town, where a Yagura, or a stage with lanterns in the town square is danced around in a circle to Hayashi music. [14]


The departure of the ancestral spirits is also important and rituals are also preformed for the sending off of these spirits.  This includes the Bon Odori again, but also has the Okuribi and the Shōrō Nagashi.  The Okuribi is the lighting of fires again, much like the Mukabi, but for the sending off of the spirits.  The Shōrō Nagashi is the sending of the spirits down the local river to the sea in paper boats.  These are called Tōrō, which are lanterns made by the people for their own ancestors with a candle inside and sent into the waters to the sea marking the end of Obon. [15]


Summer is an exciting time to be in Japan, with many of its greatest festivals on display during this time and all of the outdoor activities open to be explored.  The unpleasant weather is just a small price to pay to be able to experience everything Japan has to offer during the summer season.


References:


1. Scott Foutz, "Kaidan: Traditional Japanese Ghost Tales and Japanese Horror Film," SaruDama,
http://www.sarudama.com/japanese_folklore/kaidan_modern.shtml.


2. Ibid.


3. Zack Davisson, "What is Hyakumonogatari?" 百物語怪談会 Hyaukumonogatari Kaidankai,
http://hyakumonogatari.com/what-is-hyakumonogatari/.

4. Scott Foutz, "Kaidan: Traditional Japanese Ghost Tales and Japanese Horror Film."


5. Lafcadio Hearn, Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan (Tokyo: Tuttle Publishing, 2009), viii.


6. "Death of Kuniyoshi," Toshidama Japanese Prints,
http://toshidama.wordpress.com/2011/09/01/death-of-kuniyoshi/.


7. Library of Congress, "Yoshitoshi's One Hundred Ghosts," The Floating World of Ukiyo-e Shadows, Dreams, and Substance,
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/images.html.


8. Library of Congress, ""Oiwa" (Oiwa-san)," The Floating World of Ukiyo-e Shadows, Dreams, and Substance,
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/images.html.


9. Library of Congress, ""Kohada Koheiji"," The Floating World of Ukiyo-e Shadows, Dreams, and Substance,
http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/ukiyo-e/images.html.


10. Illustrated Festivals of Japan, 12th ed. (Japan: JTB Publishing, 2006), 174.


11. "Nagaoka Matsuri Dai Hanabi Taikai," japan-fireworks.com,
http://japan-fireworks.com/guide/e-guide/enagaoka.html.


12. Erdenee, "Nagaoka Fireworks Festival!!!," Japanese Used Car Dealer "EVERY" BLOG,
http://everyjapancar.blogspot.com/2011/07/nagaoka-fireworks-festival.html.


13. Illustrated Festivals of Japan, 170-172.


14. Ibid.


15. Ibid.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Meiji Jingu Gyoen: Power Spots and the Land of Iris.

June 26th, 2011:




Today we went to Meiji Jingū Gyoen for the second time.  Meiji Jingū Gyoen (明治神宮御苑) is the garden inside of Meiji Jingū, a shrine made for Emperor Meiji and Empress Shoken in 1920.  I have talked about Meiji Jingū here, when we went there for Hatsumōde, or the Japanese New Year's tradition of first visit to a shrine.  This was our second visit to the garden as we went on January 10th, 2011, but I wanted to wait for this visit, as this time is the highlight of the garden.  The garden is famous for its irises and June is the month they bloom, so we made sure to remember to come back to the garden at this time and were not disappointed.  I will be combining the information from both of our visits here.

Meiji Jingū Gyoen is the only part of the Naien (内苑), or inner part of Meiji Jingū Shrine that existed long before the founding of Meiji Jingū Shrine.  Meiji Jingū Gyoen used to be a yashiki (屋敷), or a daimyō's mansion. [1]  It was first owned by Kiyomasa Katō and would later come under the ownership of the Ii clan.  Kiyomasa Katō (清正 加藤) was a famous general from 1562-1611.  He was first a retainer of Hideyoshi Toyotomi, but later in life would join with Iyeasu Tokugawa.  This would prove fortunate when the latter's victory in the Battle of Sekigahara had Kiyomasa on the winning side and was given Kumamoto for his assistance.  Kiyomasa was a cousin of Hideyoshi Toyotomi's and would explain his retainership to Hideyoshi. [2]  He first distinguished himself in battle at Shizugatake in 1583 and became known as one of the 'Seven Spears.' [3]  Shizugatake is a mountain near Lake Yogo, which is directly north of Lake Biwa, Japan's largest freshwater lake located in Shiga Prefecture.  This was an important battle as it decided who would be the successor to Oda Nobunaga and continue the process of unifying Japan.  Hideyoshi Toyotomi's victory over Katsuie Shibata here meant Hideyoshi Toyotomi would have power over much of Japan at the time. [4]  


Kiyomasa would continue to prove himself as the retainer of Hideyoshi Toyotomi during the ongoing battles of Hideyoshi to assert his power over the whole of Japan.  In 1587, he participated in the invasion of Kyūshū, even defeating the famous Shimazu general Niiro Tadamoto in hand to hand combat during the battle of Sendaigawa.  When Kyūshū was secured, Kiyomasa would receive a large amount of land in Higo Province (present-day Kumamoto) as a reward. [5]  Kiyomasa, a Nichiren Buddhist, persecuted Christians in his domain much to the anger of Konishi Yukinaga, a Christian owning lands next to Kiyomasa. [6]  This conflict between the two would prove important later.  For the meantime, both would command armies during Hideyoshi's invasion of Korea in 1592.  Both were sent to capture Seoul first, but afterwards Kiyomasa was to lead his forces north along the eastern side of Korea. [7]  Kiyomasa's aggressiveness and ferocity during the campaign earned him the nickname Kishokan (鬼将官), 'Demon General' by the Koreans. [8]  This included the kidnapping of two princes to force the lower opposing officers to surrender, as well as racing up the eastern side even into China when many other officers were bogged down.  For a general whose nickname referred to his general hardcoreness, of course Kiyomasa's free time during the Korean campaign was spent hunting tigers. [9]

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi's Masakiyo Captures the Wild Tiger. [10]
This ukiyo-e is of Kiyomasa on a tiger hunt in Korea.  The name given in the title is different for a specific reason that I'll get to later on.  Yoshitoshi Tsukioka is the last of the great ukiyo-e artists, the art form kind of died with him in 1892.

The first Korean campaign ended in a truce, which angered Kiyomasa to being called back from his forward position to show good faith to the Chinese and Korean forces of their intention to stop fighting.  Kiyomasa drew back, but still found time to defeat an enemy force at Chinju with Konishi which had failed to be taken by the Japanese for a year previous, before the truce was signed. [11]

Kiyomasa would again be called upon by Hideyoshi Toyotomi in the 2nd invasion of Korea in 1597.  This time, his fame as a fighter grew in the famous siege of Ulsan.  The siege of Ulsan was an incredible victory for Kiyomasa Katō and the Japanese forces there, not only because of the large enemy force, the largest to attack a Wajō (the castles the Japanese invaders built in Korea), but also for the terrible conditions they had to face during battle.  Kiyomasa had left 7,000 in Ulsan to construct a castle, but it still was not finished when Ming Chinese forces attacked on January 29th, 1598. [12]  The Chinese forces knowing this used fire arrows to burn the temporary barracks and attacked the unfinished castle before being repelled.  Kiyomasa was notified of the attack and he sent for reinforcements and quickly sailed to Ulsan to return and lead the defense there, which was quickly surrounded by rings of enemy troops uncountable. [13]  Without completed gates, the Chinese forces were able to fire arrows directly outside the walls, leading to more destruction by fire.  After this, the defenders shut themselves within the inner castle, but conditions were already disastrous. [14]


The inner castle had no well and thus, no water and only 3 days of food.  The only fortunate thing was Chinese artillery couldn't penetrate the gates or walls of the inner fortress, but this meant continuous assault by enemy troops for the next 10 days. [15]  Conditions had reached the point where gathering parties slipped out by night to gather water from corpse filled ponds and grains of rice from dead Chinese soldiers.  Other food was, "...roasted strips of meat cut from dead horses cooked over fires made from broken arrows, piles of which lay several feet deep." [16]  A heavy rain storm provided temporary relief to their thirst, but this was followed by freezing weather that night, which stopped fighting on both sides.


In the Chosen Ki a diary of the Japanese commander Okochi Hidemoto about the battle, "...50 men at a time may be found crumpled under the unbearable hunger, thirst and cold.  In addition there are a number of men who have let their heads drop and lie down to sleep.  Other soldiers go on tours of inspection with their spears, and when they try to rouse men who have not moved all day by using the butt end of a spear, the ones who stay completely bent over have been frozen to death." [17]

At this point, the Chinese forces were also tired of fighting and offered a cease fire to Kiyomasa Katō who accepted to buy more time for the relieving force to arrive.  This would happen as Yoshinari Mōri's forces came and signaled to Kiyomasa with their banners of their arrival. [18]  At this point, Kiyomasa broke off the cease fire and the Chinese realizing another army had arrived tried one last attack that night.  When this failed, their camps had been abandoned by that morning and the forces of Kiyomasa had achieved a great victory.

Even though Japan had won at Ulsan, the battle marked the beginning of the end for the 2nd Korean campaign.  The 2nd campaign ended with the death of Hideyoshi Toyotomi , who died September 18th, 1598.  After Hideyoshi's death, a battle for succession would arise between Hideyoshi's son, Hideyori and Ieyasu Tokugawa.  This conflict would develop as the Western Army of Hideyori's side and the Eastern Army of Ieyasu's side (Ieyasu Tokugawa was based in Edo, east of Osaka where Hideyori was, hence the naming of the armies).  While it would seem obvious that Kiyomasa would join the side of the Toyotomi, he actually joined the side of the Tokugawa.  The reasons for this were the leader of the Western Army was Ishida Mitsunari, who Kiyomasa had fought with during the Korean campaign and the Western Army also had Konishi Yukinaga, his hated rival. [19]  The two sides finally met at Sekigahara leading to Ieyasu's victory and completing the unification of Japan.  Being on the winning side, Kiyomasa was given the rest of Higo (present-day Kumamoto), his hated rival finally eliminated on the wrong side at Sekigahara.

Kiyomasa would become famous for his castle designs and construction, as well as his water projects. [20]  His castle at Kumamoto being a lasting reminder of this.  Kiyomasa put many of the lessons that he learned from the terrible experience at Ulsan to good use in Kumamoto Castle.  This included nut trees within the baileys and for the matting to be stuffed with dried vegetable stalks instead of the usual rice straw for extra food.  Kumamoto Castle even survived the siege by Takamori Saigō with modern equipment during the year of 1877, some 270 years after Kumamoto's construction. [21]  Kiyomasa would also be enlisted by Ieyasu Tokugawa to construct Nagoya Castle. [22]


Kumamoto Castle. [23]
The main keep is a reconstruction; it burned down during the siege in 1877, but many of the other buildings are still original.


While it might seem like Kiyomasa was a traitor to his retainer, the Toyotomi, this might not be the case and his clan's demise might prove it.  Kiyomasa might have joined the the Tokugawa side to bring a peace between the two sides sooner to keep Hideyori safe. [24]  His continued friendship with Hideyori Toyotomi might have brought his death as Iyeasu might have arranged for his death in 1611 to remove another obstacle to finishing off the Toyotomi once and for all. [25]  Something Ieyasu would finally achieve in 1615.


Which brings me back to the strange title for the ukiyo-e print.  A kabuki play covering the story of one of the rumors of Kiyomasa's downfall that he was forced to drink poison, but did so to keep Hideyori safe appeared in 1807.  This was still during the time of the Tokugawa government so the play needed to change the names of the historic figures or otherwise be censored.  This would lead to Kiyomasa Katō's name to be changed to Masakiyo Sato. [26]  His first name being just a flipping of the kanji.  清正 Kiyomasa to 正清 Masakiyo.  The ukiyo-e print's title would then be the name for the kabuki character, even though it is really a print of Kiyomasa.  In fact, you can even see this if you look closely at the print's title in the upper right hand corner.  It was a bit tricky figuring out the correct artist and title of the print, and then also figuring out who Masakiyo Sato was and why it wasn't Kiyomasa Katō.


While there's no proof that Kiyomasa was poisoned, his son's banishment by Iemitsu Tokugawa (Ieyasu's grandson) gives some evidence that the Tokugawas wanted them removed. [27]  With that, the Hosokawa Clan was given Kiyomata's province of Higo and the Ii Clan took over the mansion at Meiji Jingū Gyoen.  However, after 1868 with the Meiji Restoration and the stepping down of the daimyō, this land was given over to the Imperial Household Ministry and would be in private use by the Emperor.  Emperor Meiji made many of the features of the current garden for his wife, Empress Shoken for her enjoyment and health. [28] 


Meiji Jingū Gyoen can be found by going along the main entrance path to the shrine, and it's just on your left after passing through Otorii, the huge wooden torii that is the largest in Meiji Jingū Shrine and the largest of its type in Japan.  Right at the entrance is a little hut that sells souvenirs and is the place to pay to enter the garden.  It's 500 yen to enter and you can see the whole garden except for Kiyomasa's Well.  To see that you need to ask and then wait for the time when groups are led back to the well.  After paying and not wanting to see the well, you're free to enter the garden, walk around and explore it at your convenience.  The garden has a wide variety of different plants, making for each season to have something unique and worth seeing throughout the year.


Following the well-kept foot path flanked by bamboo and other plants, the first sight you come across is the tea house Kakuun-tei.  This tea house was ordered to be built by the Meiji Emperor for his wife in 1900.  The present building is a 1958 reconstruction, as it was burnt down during the war. [29]


Kakuun-tei in January.  It was also a national holiday which might explain why the tea house was open.


Kakuun-tei in June.


The tea house overlooks the Nan-Chi (South Pond), which has the fishing spot Emperor Meiji made for Emperess Shoken and is remarkable fed by Kiyomasa's well.


Looking down from near the tea house unto the Nan-Chi.  These bushes here are azalea which are covered in red flowers during their peak in April. [30]


Directly down the hill from here is the fishing spot.  Otsuri-Dai (Fishing Spot) was often a place where the Empress Shoken enjoyed her time. [31]


Koi swimming lazily about the fishing spot.


Like just about everywhere with koi in Japan, there are a lot of them at the fishing spot and they come up to the surface looking for handouts when people approach.


The South Pond also has water lilies during the summer that are pretty.


Continuing along the path is the huge iris garden on multiple tiers that holds water from Kiyomasa's Well up above.  Beyond the iris garden is blocked off, holding the Well of Kiyomasa.  If you join the group tour, you are taken directly here first and allowed to see it.


The Well of Kiyomasa is famous for being a "power spot."  Power spots are usually natural wonders or shinto shrines that can supposedly give the people who visit them energy or spiritual power. [32]  The term was first created by the self-proclaimed psychic and metal bender Kiyota Masuaki in the 1990's to be a place where the earth's energy can be collected. [33]  However, power spots didn't become the fad that they have been recently until Shuhei Shimada, a famous palm-reading TV personality claimed taking a cellphone picture of Kiyomasa's Well got him a job in December of 2009.  This caused so many people to go, that the garden had to implement the new ticket system which is used today to control the amount of visitors going to the well. [34]  Power spots became a fad in 2010 through a mix of media promotion and Japanese religion.  Many of these power spots already had religious connotations, as well as mythical and supernatural abilities defined a long time ago by the shrines and spiritual nature of these Shinto holy sites.  Much of the Japanese religious practices already follow traditional practices to gain worldly benefits as well.  The power spots have become an extension of this, in people wanting to go to them for the hope of gaining good luck, changing a mood or building motivation. [35]  Even though power spots are losing their popular status and media coverage, many of these power spots already were impressive sites filled with history, culture, lore, natural beauty and / or deep spiritual connotations and won't fade along with the popularity. [36]  The Well of Kiyomasa is a power spot because it has never emptied since its discovery and creation and is the source for the whole of the South Pond.


The Well of Kiyomasa.  It's not a cellphone picture, but if there's any truth in power spots, maybe it will increase the power of this blog.


On a more serious note, the water's clarity was incredible.  You might be able to see the spout of the well in the upper left of the well wall.


The first time we came to see the well, as we learned about power spots and the well from a friend and did the full tour then.  We came back this time, because while at the garden the first time we saw the pictures of the iris garden in bloom at the entrance hut and wanted to see it.  The garden has 1500 irises from 150 different types making for an incredible sight when they bloom in June. [37]  The difference between our 2 visits of the iris garden is really incredible.


Here it is in January.


And here is almost the same exact spot in June.










I felt the sheer variety of the irises was more impressive than how many there were.  When you look at them closely, there's a wide variety of very different shapes and colors in the irises here.








If you happen to be visiting Meiji Jingū Shrine, especially during June, make the time to visit Meiji Jingū Gyoen along the way.


References:


1. Plaque, Meiji Jingu Gyoen, January 10th, 2011.


2. Chris Glenn, "Hideyoshi and Kiyomasa Memorial Museum," JapanTourist.jp,
http://www.japantourist.jp/view/hideyoshi-and-kiyomasa-memorial-museum.


3. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives,
http://www.samurai-archives.com/kiyomasa.html.


4. "Battle of Shizugatake Overview," Battles of Sengoku Jidai Japan,
http://www.trentu.ca/stuorg/tja/sengoku/shizufiles/shizuoverview.html.


5. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


6. Ibid.


7. Ibid.


8. "Kato Kiyomasa: Chikanobu and Yoshitoshi Woodblock Prints," Claremont Colleges Digital Library,
http://ccdl.libraries.claremont.edu/cdm/singleitem/collection/cyw/id/21.


9. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


10. Sofia, "The Tiger in Asian Art," The Coolture.
http://www.thecoolture.com/eco-sustainability/the-tiger-in-asian-art/.


11. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


12. Stephen Turnbull, Strongholds of the Samurai Japanese Castles 250-1877 (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2009), 228.


13. Ibid., 229.


14. Ibid.


15. Ibid.


16. Ibid., 230.


17. Ibid., 231.


18. Ibid.


19. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


20. "Kato Kiyomasa," History.com
http://www.history.com/topics/kato-kiyomasa.


21. Stephen Turnbull, Samurai Commanders (2): 1577-1638 (Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 2005), 47.


22. Chris Glenn, "Hideyoshi and Kiyomasa Memorial Museum."


23. Eric Obershaw, "Kumamoto Castle," JCastle Guide to Japanese Castles,
http://www.jcastle.info/castle/profile/8-Kumamoto-Castle.


24. Stephen Turnbull, Samurai Commanders (2): 1577-1638.


25. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


26. "Kato Kiyomasa: Chikanobu and Yoshitoshi Woodblock Prints," Claremont Colleges Digital Library.


27. F. W. Seal, "Katō Kiyomasa," The Samurai Archives.


28. "Meiji Jingu Gyoen," Meiji Jingu.
http://www.meijijingu.or.jp/english/nature/2.html.


29. Plaque, Meiji Jingu Gyoen, January 10th, 2011.


30. "Meiji Jingu Gyoen," Meiji Jingu.


31. Plaque, Meiji Jingu Gyoen, January 10th, 2011.


32. Robert Irvine, "Japan's 'Power Spots' Draw Those Looking for Hope, Drive, and a Touch of the Mystical," The Mainichi Daily News, January 1st, 2012, 
http://mdn.mainichi.jp/features/archive/news/2012/01/20120101p2g00m0fe036000c.html, (accessed February 8th, 2012).


33. Felicity Hughes, "Power Spots: Japan's Latest Spiritual Crazy," Japan Pulse, September 2nd, 2010, 
http://blog.japantimes.co.jp/japan-pulse/power-spots-japan%E2%80%99s-latest-spiritual-craze/, (accessed February 8th, 2012).


34. Robert Irvine, "Japan's 'Power Spots' Draw Those Looking for Hope, Drive, and a Touch of the Mystical."


35. Ibid.


36. Ibid.


37. "Meiji Jingu Gyoen," Meiji Jingu.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

The Works and Mysteries of Sharaku

June 12th, 2011:


Sharaku's Actor Segawa Kikunojō III as Oshizu, Wife of Tanabe Bunzō. [1]


As I mentioned last time, today we went to the last day of the Sharaku exhibit held at the Tokyo National Museum in Ueno.  Tōshūsai Sharaku (東洲斎 写楽) has become one of the most famous ukiyo-e artists even though his career spanned a brief 10 months from 1794-1795.  His fame comes from his unique style in depicting the kabuki actors that make up the majority of his work.  His style was drastically different from other artists at the time, his portraits dramatic and imbuing the personality of the actors and the character of the actor's role in these plays like no other.  Sharaku has claim by some to be one of the greatest portrait artists ever and created a style that was the most groundbreaking since the introduction of polychromatic printing about 30 years prior.  What has added to Sharaku's fame is the mysteries of his life and work are as compelling as the art itself.  Most of his life is a mystery as almost nothing is known of him and there's even debate to whether he ever actually existed.  His abrupt entrance into the art world, rapid change of style and mysterious disappearance less than a year later only add to the intrigue created by his revolutionary work.  I hope to explain here his works and what is known about his life and possibly uncover some of that mystery before describing the exhibit and my experiences there.

Attempting to write an actual biography of the famed artist is basically impossible.  So little is known about him that writing about the certainty of his actual existence, much less actual details of most of his life is an exercise in foolishness.  Instead, what I will do here is discuss the various theories surrounding Sharaku and explain the good and bad parts of each.  I will do the same for the theories explaining his disappearance in 1795 and hopefully show not only the difficulty of this task, but also some possibilities of his true identity and an explanation and context for his work.

One theory being that Sharaku isn't a person at all.  Instead it was a creation of the publishing house and other artists that had worked there. [2]  The reasons given for this theory is the rapidly changing style through Sharaku's short career and even his name of Sharaku.  Sharaku might be taken as short for Sharakusai (洒落臭い) meaning impertinent, imprudent, cheeky or in this context 'nonsense.'  If this were true, even the name would just be an inside joke of the artists impersonating this new artist. [3]  However, without much else to go on and lack of any confirmation, this theory still seems unlikely.

Another theory is that Sharaku is actually the great and famous artist Hokusai himself.  Hokusai had disappeared from the art world during the years of 1792-1796, in between which Sharaku had his art career. [4] Also, Sharaku and Hokusai share many of the same stylistic features, specifically in their samurai prints which are more traditional in format and depiction, making it easier to compare styles.  Since these prints had less room for artistic license, Hokusai would have a harder time trying to conceal his artistic identity and that's why the stylistic similarities have come out. [5]  Here's an example of this stylistic similarity with the depiction of the same kabuki actor by Sharaku and Hokusai:

Sharaku's Actor Sakata Hangorō III as Fujikawa Mizuemon. [6]

Hokusai's Actor Sakata Hangorō III as a Traveling Priest, actually Chinzei Hachirō Tamteomo. [7]

Notice specifically the similarity in faces between these prints by Sharaku and Hokusai. [8]  This theory is not limited to just Hokusai though, as the painter Maruyama Okyo, the writer Jippensha Ikku and even his publisher Tsutaya have been theorized as actually being Sharaku. [9]  Each of these theories have various points, but none very compelling without any evidence.

At the present time, the most compelling argument is that Sharaku was Saitō Jūrōbei, a Nō actor under the Lord of Awa. [10]  This is the most compelling argument due to having some historical documentation.  This was written about by the historian Saitō Gesshin in his 1844 update to Zōho ukiyo-e ruikō (Enlarged History of Floating World Prints).  He had also written that Saitō Jūrōbei had lived in Hachōbori, Edo while with the visiting Nō troupe of the Lord of Awa (present-day Tokushima). [11]  For many years this was questioned, as there was no documentation of such a person existing even though there should have been.  The source came into question for its accuracy 50 years after the fact and with nothing at all to confirm it.  However, information has been found of a Saitō Jūrōbei living in Hachōbori now making it the most likely identity of Sharaku. [12]

There are also other points that strengthen this argument.  The Lord of Awa had arrived in Edo on the 6th day of the 4th month of 1793 (4/6/1793) and then was absent from the 21st day of the 4th month of 1794 (4/21/1794) to the 2nd day of the 4th month of 1796 (4/2/1796).  If Saitō Jūrōbei did not have to accompany his lord during this time, then he would have been free to attempt printmaking at this time, which coincided with his active period of the 5th month of 1794 to the 1st month of 1795. [13]  His proximity to Osaka from Awa means he might have trained under Ryūkōsai who was making portraits of similar settings and style as Sharaku 3 years prior to Sharaku's career.  This can't be proven, but the connection does fit considering the pieces of the puzzle that are known. [14]  This is the only theory with some historical evidence, due to its recording in the art histories relatively contemporary to the time of Sharaku.  However, with so little information and historical fact along with many competing theories, Sharaku still remains to this day not only one of the greatest art mysteries of Japan, but throughout the art world as well.

Sharaku's period of work is just a short 10 months in the years of 1794 and 1795.  However, during this time he would have an incredible output of 164 known works (basically one new work every other day).  Almost all of these works are of kabuki actors in their roles, as ukiyo-e was a popular form of advertising the kabuki performances.  His other works are that of sumo and a few memorial prints.  His work is often broken up into 4 phases, not only because most of his prints advertised for 4 separate kabuki seasons, but also because his style changed dramatically in each one.  At the time, kabuki would have the same play for some weeks at a time and then take a break before a new play performance would begin.

Sharaku's entry into the art world and 1st period came in the 5th month of 1794.  This first period comprises of 28 ōban size ōkubi-e portraits backed by ground mica. [15]  Ōban refers to the size of the print being 10 x 15 inches or 25.4 x 38 centimeters. [16]  The ōkubi-e referring to the large portraits that were the nature of his form of portraiture during this stage. [17]  This first stage is Sharaku's most famous, most important and best work.  All of the prints that I have showed so far from Sharaku have been from this first phase and all of his very famous works have come from this stage.  Here are a few more from this 1st phase of work:

Sharaku's Actor Bando Mitsugorō II as Ishii Genzō. [18]

Sharaku's Actors Nakajima Wadaemon as Bōdara Chōzaemon and Nakamura Konozō as Gon of the Kanagawaya. [19]
There are also a few prints like this where two actors have been paired together in the same print.

The prints from this 1st phase are spectacular, especially when considering that almost no one else at the time was doing this.  Ukiyo-e prints had a set style by this time, as can be seen in the similarity in style of the ukiyo-e prints by other artists that I have showed in the past two posts and from any other ukiyo-e prints you have also seen.  The prints in the 1st phase of Sharaku's works push past these traditional boundaries.  The subjects take up almost all of the space and are enlarged to a half body portrait compared to the full-length works that most other artists were doing.  This style also allows for a larger face, which when combined with the subject's eyes focusing outside of the canvas creates much more energy in the work than other works where the subject is framed neatly inside the borders of the canvas.  Even though the designs are simple in detail, the emphasis of strong lines creates personality, character and added energy to the subjects.  In this way, the character is no longer the idealized form as in many other ukiyo-e prints, but a lifelike portrayal of the actor with his characteristics and even flaws to see, as well as the personality of the part that he is playing.  This life-likeness and energy in the subject matter is unique in the form of ukiyo-e and make his works really powerful, especially if you get the chance to see the pairing of the kabuki actors staring down at each other, looking like they are about ready to leap out of the page and strike down the other.  Even with a singular color background, the ground purple mica of these prints creates a texture and shine that adds to the work as a whole.

Only 2-3 months later, his style starts to change in what is known as his 2nd phase, releasing 38 more prints for the next kabuki season.  This time, 8 are of the ōban size and 30 are hosoban size, all being full-length style portraits. [20]  Hosoban is 5 x 13 inches or 14.5 x 33 centimeters, so smaller than the ōban size. [21]  At this point, the characteristics that made his work from the 1st phase so remarkable has been subdued and is slowly conforming back to the traditional ukiyo-e style.  Here are some of his works from the 7th and 8th months of 1794:

Sharaku's Shinozuka Uraemon Reading the Prologue at the Miyako Theater. [22]
This print to me represents a middle ground of the styles from the 2 phases.

Sharaku's Actors Ichikawa Komazō III as Kameya Chūbei  and Nakayama Tomisaburō as Umegawa. [23]
One of the more famous works from his 2nd phase, and one of the only famous works not from the 1st phase.

Sharaku's Actors Ichikawa Omezō as Tomita Hyōtarō and Ōtani Oniji III as Kawashima Jibugo. [24]
The same actor in this print was in the first print I showed of Sharaku's in the last post if you wish to compare the style of the 2 phases.
Sharaku's Actor Bandō Hikosaburō III as Obiya Chōemon. [25]

Sharaku's Actors Segawa Tomisaburō II as the Courtesan Toyama and Ishikawa Kurizō as Higashiyama Yoshiwakamaru. [26]

These 5 prints give a good range of the stylistic changes during Sharaku's 2nd phase.  During this time, the characters shrink fitting inside the page instead of looming larger than life outside the bounds of the prints as in the 1st phase.  There's less use of line involved in the composition, making the pieces much like the formal style of ukyio-e art and also removing the character and personality that the subjects radiated before.  The energy from before is gone as the subjects interact fully inside the frame, instead of beyond the borders as in previous works.  In general, this 2nd phase is a reverting back to the traditional styles and forms of ukiyo-e and a backing away from the elements that made the 1st phase groundbreaking, unique and powerful.

However, this change of style might not have been done fully based on choice.  There's a lot of reasoning suggesting that Sharaku was persuaded to change his style.  This might have been done by the asking of his publisher, Tsutaya to increase the amount of buyers by making more widely appealing works and to use cheaper materials. [27]  Or Tsutaya might have asked Sharaku to switch to full-length portraits and change his style because people were uncomfortable with this 'extreme realism' that Sharaku had introduced. [28]  In fact, Sharaku's prints could have been penalized by the kabuki actors he depicted and their fans.  The costs of prints might have been subsidized by the kabuki estabilishment and they would not have been happy about being depicted realistically, especially the onnagata, or female impersonators who were depicted as man portraying woman in Sharaku's works instead of like women in the normal prints.  They could have used the withholding of subsidies to also force the change if these subsidies did indeed exist. [29]  These factors combined with him probably not having fully developed his style by this time could have led to the rapid changes in style that we see from him. [30]  This pattern continues through the 3rd and 4th phases as well.  It's easy to notice his style continuing to change during this time, and you might also be able to notice that his prints continue to shrink in size and cuts in cost, as the mica backing is also done away with in his later prints.

His 3rd phase is from the 11th month of 1794 and also happens to be his most prolific.  During this time, he produced 64 different prints.  4 ōban sized, 47 hosoban sized and 13 aiban sized.  These are all in the full-length style, except for 3 aiban in the ōkubi-e style that was the mark of his earlier work. [31]  The aiban prints are 9 x 13 inches or 22.5 x 34.5 centimeters, so these are even smaller and would be the smallest size of his prints. [32]  Here are some prints from this phase representative of the new changes in Sharaku's style and work:

Sharaku's Actor Segawa Kikunojō III, also called Hamamuraya Rokō , as the Maid Ohama. [33]
One of the three aiban prints in the 
ōkubi-e style.  His original way of depicting portraiture is back, but his style has changed as it is more formal and lacks the realistic blemishes of his earlier work.  Also the mica backing is gone, as this is just ink on paper.

Sharaku's Actor Sanokawa Ichimatsu III as Ihohata. [34]
His sparse backgrounds that drew the focus only on the person of before is gone as background elements and even props are being added to his compositions.

Sharaku's Actor Sawamura Sōjūrō III as Ōtomo no Kuronushi. [35]
More props on his actors.  It feels like his focus has changed from focusing on the realistic depictions of the people in his portraits to focusing on the costumes that they wore.  Many of the pieces seem to focus in on the clothing in fine detail, while the rest of the print is simple.  Much like his first phase when the faces were detailed and everything else was simplified.  Maybe Sharaku wanting to only draw realistically and no longer able to do so with faces, moved on to the clothing as the next logical step.

Sharaku's Actor Ichikawa Komazō III as Shinozuka Gorō (Sadatsuna). [36]

During this phase, much of his work is working in the same style as his contemporaries.  Even the ōkubi-e prints that were the definition of his style in the 1st phase have changed.  The removal of the ground mica in the background causes a large loss of effect from his earlier prints.  Also, there is less focus on realistic depiction in the faces making for less personality in the characters and a more formal form.  I'm sure the actors portraying these women in the prints were happy for this change.  Due to these changes, the ōkubi-e style isn't even so novel, as it was also already being used in prints of beautiful women at the time called Bijinga (美人畫), meaning aptly enough, 'beautiful person picture.'  Although there is still one print in the ōkubi-e style depicting a male actor in this phase, so it's not completely empty of innovation.  This would be the last time though that Sharaku would use the ōkubi-e style in his art.

His other prints also fall in line with the more traditional form and style of ukiyo-e.  The actors have become framed within the print and they take their formal forms here with traditional motifs along the borders, in the background and even as props interacting with the character.  The excessive realism of his earlier works are gone, and along with it the energy and personality imbued with it.  However, I feel not all of this realism that Sharaku strived so hard to depict throughout his art is lost.  Possibly not being allowed to use the realism that he wanted to in the people and faces of his portraits, he instead has to place that within the costumes that the kabuki actors are wearing.  For many of the works from this phase, the clothing is highly detailed and becomes the focus and what the eye is attracted to while looking at the piece.

His 4th phase would be in the 1st month of 1795 with 15 prints.  Of these 15 prints, 10 are hosoban and 5 are aiban.  All of them being full-length portraits. [37]  These 15 prints would be the last of his works in ukiyo-e.

Sharaku's Actor Ichikawa Ebizō as Kudō Saemon Suketsune. [38]
The 4th phase still has some emphasis in costume, although even now the details and lines have become weaker.

Sharaku's Actor Sawamura Sōjūrō III as Satsuma Gengobei. [39]
Otherwise, many of his prints from this time look no different than those of even Suzuki Harunobu's work.  Even though Harunobu preceded Sharaku by 30 years and was the beginning of full color prints in ukiyo-e. 
  

Sharaku's Actor Iwai Kumesaburō as the Geisha Kumekichi. [40]
His original style has diminished even to the point that some of his works start to feel very bland.

Sharaku's Actor Ichikawa Danjūrō VI as Soga no Gorō Tokimune. [41]
Combined with his flaws in depicting bodies and other parts besides the face, it seems unlikely that Sharaku could continue to match his other contemporaries using the same style.

There is not much else to say here besides what I wrote in the captions.  By the 4th Phase, Sharaku had completely transferred his style into the traditional ukiyo-e style.  It would be difficult to pick out anything remarkable about these prints compared to Sharaku's contemporaries at the time.  Combined with the difficulties he had throughout his career of depicting bodies and other parts besides the face accurately and aesthetically pleasing, Sharaku was not going to be able to match other artists while using the same style.  The things that set him apart were his focus on realism and using that for portraits with the ōkubi-e style.  With all of that removed by this phase, his works during this time don't have much going for them.

After these last few prints, Sharaku had disappeared never to be heard from again.  Just like his life before emerging as an artist, there are a variety of theories on the reason of his disappearance.  These theories revolve around two main ideas that either his work's unpopularity led to his quitting or not having further opportunities; or other commitments forced him to leave the art world.

The lack of sales on his work led to his quitting or departure from the art world is the first main theory.  Around the time of Sharaku, Ota Nanpō, who was an artist and writer wrote of Sharaku in the Ukiyo-e ruikō, the predecessor to the book I mentioned earlier. [42]  At the time he wrote about Sharaku as,
"Sharaku designed likenesses of Kabuki actors, but because he depicted them too truthfully, his prints did not conform to accepted ideas, and his career was short." [43]

Based on other artists at the time, Sharaku's prints weren't popular and didn't sell because of his focus on realism.  If this is true, he might not have been able to find a publisher willing to publish his works even if he wished to continue.  This suggests that perhaps his publisher Tsutaya finally ended his encouragement and support of Sharaku due to disappointing sales of his work. [44]  Or perhaps this isn't the case.  Utamaro, who was one of the most famous and popular ukiyo-e artists and others also left publisher Tsutaya at the same time, but they went on to other publishers to continue working while Sharaku didn't.  Maybe Sharaku had made his statement to the art world and wasn't going to continue dealing with market and publisher demands regarding his work. [45]  Going further on this thought with the other ideas, perhaps Sharaku intended to continue working, but couldn't find the support of another publisher due to his breaking from traditional ideas in his work.  Or it's even possible that Sharaku had the support of Tsutaya to continue working even though his prints weren't selling, but Sharaku wouldn't have the same support from other publishers because of this.  These are the main arguments for this theory.

The other theory is based on Sharaku having other commitments or other reasons to leave the art world.  Most of these focus on the basis of Sharaku being the Nō actor Saitō Jūrōbei.  If Sharaku was Saitō Jūrōbei, then he might have had commitments to his Nō troupe or to his lord that would have forced the end of his art career. [46]  Other speculation is that perhaps his master was unhappy with his association with kabuki, which was of a lower class than the Nō, which he was a part of.  This is only speculation though. [47]

Some of these theories are better than others.  At some point, the unpopularity of his work and the economic reasons had to factor into the decision somehow.  Whether by his publisher, Tsutaya, another publisher that Sharaku might have switched to or even the support he needed to continue working regardless.  The theory of his commitments seem a little more shaky.  With the use of an alias and the only documented identity of Sharaku coming many years after the fact, it seems unlikely that his identity would be well known.  In terms of the commitments to his Nō troupe, this would definitely be a factor, but with his lord still gone until the 4th month of 1796 according to the sources I found, it also seems unlikely that there was an immediate need to end his career after the 1st month of 1795.  Also many of these theories are based on his forcing to quit based on external forces, but I wonder if there was not some decision on his own to leave the art world when he did.  Whether he felt he had completed what he had set out to do, was tired of the changes he had to make to his art or discouraged from the lack of success that he had.

His disappearance in 1795 was so complete that we almost would have never heard of him again, much less would he have the fame that he has today without the work of Julius Kurth.  Julius Kurth was an art historian and in 1910 discovered, conducted research and wrote a book about the artist, bringing him back from the shadows as Sharaku had stayed disappeared before this.  Upon being compared as equal to Rembrandt and Velazquez as the world's greatest portraitists, Sharaku had re-entered the spotlight. [48]  After this, he has come to be known as one of the most important ukiyo-e artists, and as first written by Julius Kurth, has status as one of the world's best portraitists as well.

However, part of me wonders if his fame as one of the most famous ukiyo-e artists is really deserved.  The work of his masterpieces as an artist isn't in question, but his fame as a ukiyo-e artist is puzzling.  We already know that his prints weren't commercially successful and the actors that he depicted didn't like them either.  While some artists have success even without commercial success, we can't even say that Sharaku had success artistically at the time.  Other men of culture that were his contemporaries didn't see his work as a success either.
"(Sharaku) drew portraits of actors, but he ended up drawing them in an undesirable way as he was trying hard to depict them too truthfully," as written by Ota Shokusanjin, a writer during the time of Sharaku. [49]

If he wasn't even successful as an artist then, then why he is one of the most famous ukiyo-e artists now.  Being rediscovered and deemed important by Julius Kurth, a German, at the time of 1910 complicates Sharaku's legacy as a ukiyo-e artist.  Is his legacy accurate in the realm of Japanese ukiyo-e prints or a construction helped along by an outside force?  While puzzling over this dilemma and researching for anything that might help decide things one way or the other, I came across the writing of James A. Michener on the subject.  At this point for me, things had come scarily full circle.  James A. Michener is the famous writer from the town of Doylestown, Pennsylvania.  Doylestown just happens to be the town near where I came from upon moving to Japan.  I had now reached full circle here.  I had moved from a town around Doylestown to Japan in order to study about a Japanese artist written about from the most famous person from Doylestown.  At this point, pushed along by the insane amount of time it has taken to do the research for this post, it felt like it was a sign that it was time to pack it up and move back.  However, I'm still here and Michener's comments on Sharaku really match my feelings on Sharaku, although I needed the much more elegant words of Michener to finish piecing it all together for me.

"His power lay not in technical skill but in the psychological content of his portraits.  This is a dangerous qualification to propose because it immediately accepts that a western mind is applying a western concept --that human portraiture needs psychological content--whereas obviously much eastern art is composed on exactly contrary principles, whereby a portrait is intended to be mainly decorative." [50]

also:

"This means that Sharaku is praised in western circles because he is less Japanese than any other ukiyo-e master.  Abandoning the traditional styles of his nation, he acquired one that makes western acceptance easy, and it is ironic that today great numbers of westerners applaud Sharaku because he is so Japanese, whereas the truth is that he is largely un-Japanese and quite like us." [51]

These criticisms of his fame as a Japanese ukiyo-e master, not the qualities that make Sharaku a great artist are what seems to have happened to Sharaku and his work.  His contemporaries at the time of his work felt that his art was unappealing and attempted to depict his subjects too realistically to the point where some were uncomfortable with his innovations in style and form.  It is likely these feelings contributed to his short career and led to his work being ignored and largely forgotten for a long time.  This would continue only until a westerner (Julius Kurth, German) would publish a book comparing him with the greats of western portraiture and then Sharaku would come back into the spotlight and become one of the most famous ukiyo-e artists that he is today.  What complicates the issue is that his fame within Japan is just as great or greater than outside of it.  Would Sharaku have always been famous if rediscovered by one of his own countrymen and without the comparisons to giants in the western art world?  Was Sharaku an artist that unfortunately had been lost and this rediscovery only restored the fame as a Japanese artist he would have always had?  Or has this western connection and comparison influenced / augmented his fame as a Japanese artist?  Of course it would be impossible to come to any definitive conclusion to this.  One thing that makes the argument more interesting and more impossible to solve at the same time is the timing of Julius Kurth's work.  When his book was published in 1910, Japan was still modernizing and westernizing, trying to be equals with the other western powers.  With this praise of one of their own, Sharaku could have possibly became the cultural link of a Japanese artist that could be celebrated as an equal to the great western ones.  Whether this generated any increase in fame or popularity for Sharaku as a Japanese artist would be an interesting debate.

This exhibit at the Tokyo National Museum shows the fame and praise Sharaku has as a Japanese ukiyo-e master.  The exhibit itself was incredible for its completeness.  It was the first time for me to attend an exhibition of an artist with almost all of their works present.  Being able to see an artist's full work up-close is an amazing experience that everyone should try and experience if possible.  Seeing the actor prints paired together as they would be, their intense expressions squaring off at each other like they were ready to leap off of their prints and lock into a duel at any minute has become my main image of Sharaku's work.  Through that kind of experience, one can really get the chance to more fully understand an artist's work better than any other way.  Not only did the exhibit have this, but it had full explanations and history of the art and the artist in Japanese and English (A surprise to me, as a few weeks before at a Rembrandt exhibit there was no English at all).  Showings of other artists' works at the same time as Sharaku for context and multiple copies of some of his works to show the effects of aging on the art over time also greatly added to the exhibit and the understanding of the artist.  It's how art exhibits should be, but the mixture of private and public collectors, the price of the works and an unwillingness to lend them out makes this experience disappointingly rare.

While he disappeared for over 110 years until found again by Julius Kurth, and much of his life and work still remains a mystery, Sharaku deserves the fame and praise that he has received as an artist, regardless of the complexities of his fame as a Japanese ukiyo-e master.  His unique style brings out not only the qualities of his subjects, but also those of whom they are trying to portray themselves.  This style, so drastically different from his other ukiyo-e contemporaries, those before him and even after him, makes not only his importance and fame from his ukiyo-e prints deserved, but also his ranking among the greatest of portraitists.

References:

1. "Actor Segawa Kikunojō III as Oshizu, Wife of Tanabe Bunzō," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-segawa-kikunoj-iii-as-oshizu-wife-of-tanabe-bunz-234877.

2. "Biography," Artrev.com.
http://www.artrev.com/art/artists/biography.asp?aid=450&artist=Toshusai%20Sharaku.

3. Ibid.

4. Ibid.

5. Japan Echo Inc. "MASTER IN DISGUISE: Professor Sheds Light on Mystery Ukiyo-e Artist," Trends in Japan.
http://web-japan.org/trends98/honbun/ntj990323.html.

6. "Actor Sakata Hangorō III as Fujikawa Mizuemon," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-sakata-hangor-iii-as-fujikawa-mizuemon-234883.

7. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. "Actor Sakata Hangorō III as a Traveling Priest, actually Chinzei Hachirō Tametomo," MFA Educators Online.
http://educators.mfa.org/objects/detail/264196?related_people_text=Katsushika+Hokusai&page=45.

8. Japan Echo Inc. "MASTER IN DISGUISE: Professor Sheds Light on Mystery Ukiyo-e Artist."

9. Hideki Inoue, "Sharaku, Whoever he was, Turned Ukiyo-e on its Head with his Realistic Style," Asahi.com, May 14, 2011,
http://www.asahi.com/english/TKY201105130213.html, (accessed January 30, 2012).

10. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)," Viewing Japanese Prints.
http://www.viewingjapaneseprints.net/texts/ukiyoetexts/ukiyoe_pages/sharaku3.html.

11. Ibid.

12. Hideki Inoue, "Sharaku, Whoever he was, Turned Ukiyo-e on its Head with his Realistic Style."

13. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

14. Ibid.

15. Ibid.

16. "Japanese Prints Sizes," Artelino.
http://www.artelino.com/articles/japanese_print_sizes.asp.

17. Kumi Matsumaru, "The many faces of Sharaku," Daily Yomiuri Online, May 20, 2011, http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/features/arts/T110519003574.htm (accessed January 30, 2012).

18. "Actor Bando Mitsugorō II as Ishii Genzō," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-bando-mitsugor-ii-as-ishii-genz-234870.

19. "Actors Nakajima Wadaemon as Bōdara Chōzaemon and Nakamura Konozō as Gon of the Kanagawaya," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actors-nakajima-wadaemon-as-b-dara-ch-zaemon-and-nakamura-konoz-as-gon-of-the-kanagawaya-234861.

20. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

21. "Japanese Prints Sizes," Artelino.

22. "Shinozuka Uraemon Reading the Prologue at the Miyako Theater," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/shinozuka-uraemon-reading-the-prologue-at-the-miyako-theater-234863.

23. "Actors Ichikawa Komazō III as Kameya Chūbei and Nakayama Tomisaburō as Umegawa," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actors-ichikawa-komaz-iii-as-kameya-ch-bei-and-nakayama-tomisabur-as-umegawa-234865.

24. "Actors Ichikawa Omezō as Tomita Hyōtarō and Ōtani Oniji III as Kawashima Jibugo," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actors-ichikawa-omez-as-tomita-hy-tar-and-tani-oniji-iii-as-kawashima-jibugor-234867.

25. "Actor Bandō Hikosaburō III as Obiya Chōemon," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-band-hikosabur-iii-as-obiya-ch-emon-234888.

26. "Actors Segawa Tomisaburō II as the Courtesan Toyama and Ishikawa Kurizō as Higashiyama Yoshiwakamaru," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actors-segawa-tomisabur-ii-as-the-courtesan-toyama-and-ishikawa-kuriz-as-higashiyama-yoshiwakamaru-234887.

27. Kumi Matsumaru, "The many faces of Sharaku," Daily Yomiuri Online.


28. C.B. Liddell, "Knowing Sharaku's Art Without Knowing the Artist," The Japan Times Online, May 26, 2011, http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fa20110526a1.html (accessed February 1, 2012).


29. "Sharaku: The Mystery Man Unmasked," The Independent, May 17, 2011, http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/sharaku-the-mystery-man-unmasked-2284970.html (accessed February 1, 2012).


30. Kumi Matsumaru, "The many faces of Sharaku," Daily Yomiuri Online.


31. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."


32. "Japanese Prints Sizes," Artelino. 


33. "Actor Segawa Kikunojō III, also called Hamamuraya Rokō, as the Maid Ohama," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-segawa-kikunoj-iii-also-called-hamamuraya-rok-as-the-maid-ohama-233501.

34. "Actor Sanokawa Ichimatsu III as Ihohata," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-sanokawa-ichimatsu-iii-as-ihohata-233507.

35. "Actor Sawamura Sōjūrō III as Ōtomo no Kuronushi," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-sawamura-s-j-r-iii-as-tomo-no-kuronushi-234895.

36. "Actor Ichikawa Komazō III as Shinozuka Gorō (Sadatsuna)," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-ichikawa-komaz-iii-as-shinozuka-gor-sadatsuna-234889.

37. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

38. "Actor Ichikawa Ebizō as Kudō Saemon Suketsune," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-ichikawa-ebiz-as-kud-saemon-suketsune-233509.

39. "Actor Sawamura Sōjūrō III as Satsuma Gengobei," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-sawamura-s-j-r-iii-as-satsuma-gengobei-233513.

40. "Actor Iwai Kumesaburō as the Geisha Kumekichi," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-iwai-kumesabur-as-the-geisha-kumekichi-231535.

41. "Actor Ichikawa Danjūrō VI as Soga no Gorō Tokimune," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/actor-ichikawa-danj-r-vi-as-soga-no-gor-tokimune-234890.

42. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

43. "Biography," Artrev.com.

44. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

45. "Sharaku: The Mystery Man Unmasked," The Independent.

46. John Fiorillo, "Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794-1795)."

47. "Biography," Artrev.com.

48. Hideki Inoue, "Sharaku, Whoever he was, Turned Ukiyo-e on its Head with his Realistic Style," Asahi.com.


49. Ibid.

50. James A. Michener, The Floating World (University of Hawaii Press, 1983), 177.

51. Ibid., 178.