JAPANESE PRINTS
A MILLION QUESTIONS
TWO MILLION
MYSTERIES
Ukiyo-e Prints
浮世絵版画
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Port Townsend, Washington |
UTAGAWA SADAHIDE*
歌川貞秀
うたがわ.さだひで
1807-1879** |
Subject: Pilgrimage to
the top of Fuji |
Size: 14 3/4"
x 10 1/8" |
Publisher: Daikokuya
Kinnosuke
版元: 大黒(国)屋金之助
はんもと: だいこくや.きんのすけ |
Date: 1853, 5th Month
Kaei 6
嘉永6 |
Signed: Gountei
Sadahide hitsu
五雲亭貞秀筆
ごうんてい.さだひで.ひつ
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Illustrated:
Another copy of this print is shown on line at the Boston Museum of Fine
Arts
web site. It is from the William Sturgis Bigelow Collection -
accession number 11.37417a-c
Note that the Museum
of Fine Arts displays on line the entire triptych.
Our panel is from the
right hand side. Ours is also far more colorful. |
Originally priced
at $175.00
Now on sale for
$121.00 |
*We have commented
on other pages about the confusion which accompanies Japanese names and how
they are used or adopted into Western languages. This is true here too.
Although we have chosen to refer to this artist as Utagawa Sadahide a more
thorough search on the Internet in Japanese can be found by looking under an
alternative name: Gountei Sadahide. For whatever reason we have found that
by cutting and pasting in the kanji characters for Gountei (五雲亭) at
Google the results are far more successful than if we use the full name or
by looking under Utagawa.
There is a
wonderful series of volumes called Ukiyo-e Masterpieces in European
Collections published by Kodansha. In these this artist is listed under
Hashimoto Sadahide no matter how the prints are signed. |
**Laurence Roberts in
his A Dictionary of Japanese Artists (1976, p. 135) gives 1873 as the
year Sadahide died. Richard Lane in his Images from the Floating World
(1978, p. 318) repeats this. However, Japanese web sites give it as 1879
which is probably much more accurate. Julia Meech-Pekarik in her The
World of the Meiji Print (1986, p. 14) is more cautious and gives a date
which is on the cusp: "78/9." For these reasons we have chosen to follow the
Japanese example until we are proven wrong. |
Two contributors,
A.K. and E., have helped immensely with research on this page.
For that we are
extremely grateful. |
A MYSTERY SOLVED |
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Almost every print
poses at least one problem to be solved. While some print images are more
straightforward and less complex than others the majority are usually
layered with symbolic and cultural references which are far removed from our
understanding. Every art historian must play the junior Sherlock
Holmes.
Julia Meech-Pekarik
notes that Sadahide "...documented the growth of Yokohama, beginning in late
1859, with many painstakingly detailed panoramic aerial views based on
meticulous geographical research. In plate 1 [of her book Sadahide]... has
joined six sheets, but he sometimes used as many as nine sheets of paper,
creating images six feet long." (1) This quote is most telling not for what
it says about Yokohama, but what it emphasizes about the career of the
artist: He often specialized in panoramic views.
In the American
wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art is a 360° diorama of the palace and
gardens at Versailles painted by John Vanderlyn in 1818-19. It has a
circular room to itself and in the center is a round, elevated, wooden
platform. Standing there the viewer may have a sense of vertigo, but it is
worth it. This project wasn't only meant to serve as a spectacle, but
also a tool. It familiarized the viewer with a locale they might never have
an opportunity to visit in person. Or it might prepare others for what they
would see if they could travel to Europe. Or, it might even act as a
memento. Sadahide's expansive views must have functioned in the same
way.
The print featured
on this page dates from the late 1840s twelve years before the Yokohama
scene mentioned by Meech-Pekarik. However, it differs markedly in subject
matter: religious/spiritual vs. urban/commercial. Most of the multiple
series by Sadahide seem to fall into the latter category. However, there is
another triptych by this artist in the Musée Guimet which is quasi-religious
in nature. It too was published by Daikokuya Kinnosuke and probably
dates from the same period. (2) It is entitled "Sakyamuni's Asceticism
Towards Buddhadhood." |
(1) The World of
the Meiji Print: Impressions of a New Civilization, Julia
Meech-Pekarik, Weatherhill, 1986, p. 14.
(2) Ukiyo-e
Masterpieces in European Collections: Musée Guimet, Paris, II,
supervised by Muneshige Narazaki, Kodansha, 1990, p. 198. |
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It is clear that
this print was not meant to stand alone. It was originally married to two others which gave a fuller view of what the
artist was trying to express. We have in stock one other print from
this grouping, but which we have not yet posted. Thanks to information
provided by E., one of our contributors, we now know the location and
purpose of this print. Via e-mail he told us that it "shows pilgrims making
the final ascent of Fuji."
Below is a
detail from the unposted print which gives another part of the title.
E's message reads in
part: "The 'legend' in full seems clear Dai-nihon zetcho no zue, 'A picture
of the topmost peak of Japan' and the most top left lable on the first print
seems to [be] a variant of Fugaku-san. The ascent of Fuji is traditionally
divided into ten (unequal) stages called go (with a long 'o') and the bottom
right of your labels4jpg gives the eighth [hachigo-me] stage, where the
ascent routes from Yoshida and Subashiri converge at 10,990 feet (the summit
is 12.100 feet)."
Now we know - thanks
to E.
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Decades before
Sadahide created his cartographical prints Hokusai was producing aerial
views of various provinces. How he did this is quite beyond my understanding
and how accurate they were is a question left to the experts, but no matter
how he created quite a few of them.
The Japanese and
Chinese had a long tradition, centuries old, of painting expansive scenes
seen from above, but with various points of perspective all at the same
time. Hokusai simply enlarged the scale. Sadahide followed this
pattern and if you look carefully at the print offered on this page you will
notice that you can look down, straight on and up in one sweeping glance. He
even extended the top of the mountain into the unprinted border at the top
as though the mountain was so large that it couldn't be contained. This
increases its sense of scale.
The Hokusai detail
shown immediately above is from a bird's-eye view of Kazusa and Awa
Provinces circa the late 1810s. |
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Above is a detail from
another panoramic view by Sadahide. This one is from a triptych dealing with
a section of the Tokaido Road. |
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Above is a detail from
a triptych by Kuniteru II showing pilgrims at the top of Mt. Fuji --- dated
circa 1865. |
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STONE HUT
石室
いしむろ
ISHIMURO |
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AMIDA
阿弥陀
あみだ |
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カ
ga |
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HOLLOW OR PIT
窪
くぼ
KUBO |
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Above is a detail of
pilgrims visiting Mt. Fuji. from another print by Sadahide and also from ca.
1847, but produced by a different publisher than the one featured on this
page. These panoramic views were obviously meant as guides for such visits. |
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HAND WASHING
手水
ちょうず
CHOUZU |
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SHED
小屋
こや
KOYA |
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Direct purchase
may be made through check or
money order or by payment through PayPal.
Contact us if you are interested.
jv@printsofjapan.com |
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