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323 results for utamaro

Image for Utamaro: Songs of the Garden
Although far removed in subject matter from the elegant courtesans for which Kitagawa Utamaro (1753–1806) is justly renowned, the "Book of Insects" (Ehon mushi erabi, literally translated as "Picture Book of Selected Insects") is not merely a footnote to the artist's lifework. Rather, it is a pivotal work, one that assured Utamaro's future artistic career and anticipated subsequent developments in Japanese art. For in the book's fifteen delicate designs, the artist has woven threads of Japanese and Chinese artistic tradition together with a naturalism obtainable only through keen powers of observation. Although the title mentions only insects, a variety of plant and animal life is portrayed and rendered with such subtlety and graceful simplicity that the true genius displayed by the artist can be easily overlooked. Although this book is now treasured for its illustrations, it was originally designed not simply as a picture book but as an anthology of specially commissioned poems on the subject of insects. In fact, the verses composed for each plate, new translations of which appear at the back of this volume, are appropriate poetic companions to Utamaro's unorthodox drawings. Yadoya no Meshimori, who compiled the poems and wrote the preface, was the leader of the kyōka (comic verse) movement, which emerged as a reaction against rigid classical traditions and allowed for great freedom of subject and style, for the poems often incorporate humorous or amorous undertones. In his preface Meshimori reveals that the idea for a selection of poetry based on the theme of love but apparently devoted to insects occurred to him and his friends as they sat listening to crickets and cicadas along a riverbank, an activity popular as early as the tenth century in Japan but given new life here as the poetic form and theme depart radically from tradition. The original Ehon mushi erabi consists of two volumes bound so that the fifteen designs form double-page illustrations, each one including depictions of two different species and two accompanying poems. Based on a superb first-edition copy in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Songs of the Garden reproduces the fifteen designs by Utamaro in a facsimile size, arranged in a fold-out format to be viewed in Western fashion, left to right. The printed texts, unlike the original, follow the illustrations and a note about the poetry and the translations.
Image for Cataloging and the Crescent City
editorial

Cataloging and the Crescent City

March 22, 2017

By Jared Ash, William Blueher, and Tamara Fultz

Librarians William Blueher, Tamara Fultz, and Jared Ash discuss presentations they gave at a recent art-librarians conference in New Orleans.
Image for I'll Be Your Mirror: Digitizing Japanese Illustrated Books
editorial

I'll Be Your Mirror: Digitizing Japanese Illustrated Books

November 15, 2017

By Liz Legere

Library Associate Liz Legere discusses some of the Japanese illustrated books she recently digitized.
Image for Frans Masereel: The First Woodcut Novelist
editorial

Frans Masereel: The First Woodcut Novelist

August 23, 2017

By Tamara Fultz

Associate Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz discusses the gorgeous woodcuts of Frans Masereel.
Image for Watching Flip Books Flip
editorial

Watching Flip Books Flip

April 13, 2016

By Tamara Fultz

Associate Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz shares some videos of flip books in action.
Image for The Path to Standardization at Thomas J. Watson Library
editorial

The Path to Standardization at Thomas J. Watson Library

August 19, 2020

By Tamara Fultz

Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz discusses the evolution of cataloging standards in Watson Library.
Image for A Passion for Antiquity: Sir William Hamilton and His Vase Collection
Associate Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz discusses Sir William Hamilton's collection of Greek vases.
Image for Liberotti's Masterpieces in Miniature
editorial

Liberotti's Masterpieces in Miniature

November 10, 2015

By Tamara Fultz

Associate Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz looks at some of the gorgeous engravings from Liberotti Impronte.
Image for Cataloging in the Comfort of One’s Own Home: The Galleria Martano Project
Museum Librarian Tamara Fultz discusses cataloging exhibition catalogs from the Galleria Martano while working at home.
Image for Kiyomizu Komachi, from the series Futabagusa nana Komachi

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: 1790s
Accession Number: JP986

Image for In the Kitchen

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1794–95
Accession Number: JP1675

Image for Printer's woodblock for a Kitagawa Utamaro print (recut?)

Date: early 19th century
Accession Number: 33.76.1

Image for Yamauba and Kintarō Playing with a Cherry

Kitagawa Utamaro 喜多川歌麿 (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1795
Accession Number: JP1438

Image for Picture Book of Amusements of the Eastern Capital (Ehon Azuma asobi) 絵本吾妻遊

Kitagawa Utamaro 喜多川歌麿 (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: 1790, first month
Accession Number: JIB41

Image for The Outer Robe

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1795
Accession Number: JP2736

Image for Young Woman with an Otsue Demon Dressed as an Itinerant Priest

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1804
Accession Number: JP990

Image for Enjoying the Cool Evening Breeze on and under the Bridge

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1800
Accession Number: JP663

Image for “Wife,” from the series Connoisseur of Modern Customs (Tōsei fūzoku tsū)

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1790
Accession Number: JP1121

Image for Yamauba and Kintarō

Kitagawa Utamaro (Japanese, ca. 1754–1806)

Date: ca. 1795
Accession Number: JP980