WHAT DOES ANY
OF THIS
HAVE TO DO
WITH
KUNIYOSHI?
PLENTY!
Kuniyoshi, like
Picasso, --- and every other artist --- follows a similar pattern.
When I first posted
the image of the nine Suikoden figures featured on this page I was struck by the
tattoo of the horse on the chest and belly of the man at the bottom
center. While tattoos on Japanese prints tend to fascinate me anyway this
one struck me as particularly unusual. Notice the placement --- the
position of the head vs. the rump --- and the effort to mimic the brush work
of a sumi painting. I remembered seeing another horse by Kuniyoshi in almost
exactly the same pose.
Our print is dated ca. 1830
while the print of the horse shown immediately above is from a series
entitled "Birds and Beasts" published approximately seven years later.
So that could not be the source. However, there may be an immediate
precedent in the book illustration shown below which has a definite date of 1830
in its preface. (This was generously sent to me by a contributor.) It is an
from the "Ichiyu gafu" or "The Drawing Book of Ichiyu". |