Her Haughtynesses Decree

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

Sunday, January 23, 2022

鳥居 清信 | Torii Kiyonobu I | 1664-1729 | Bijin #11

Torii Kiyonobu (active 1698 - 1729) was a founder of the Torii painter school and Ukiyo-e printmaker, often in large formats such as theatre signboards. As a child, Kiyonobu grew up in Osaka, leaving in 1688 to work in Edo.[1] As an artists, he was heavily influenced by the influential Ukiyo-e artist Hishikawa Moronobu (active 1672-1694) and leading provincial E-maki illustrator Yoshida Hanbei (active 1664-1692). Torii's father Kiyomoto was an established Osaka Kabuki actor and with Kiyomoto, Kiyonobu began the Torii school of painting, otherwise known as a precursor to Ukiyo-e.[1][2] 

A period of Dramatic Change

Kabuki has a very special link to Ukiyo-e, as it was the popular theatrical entertainment for the masses during the 17th and 18th century in one form or another. Originally, Kabuki was a dance-drama style of popular entertainment created by the shrine maiden Izumo no Okuni (出雲阿国 | 1578-1613) around the time that Ieyasu came to power. From 1603-1629, women played many roles, but after this were routinely banned for their sauciness. Instead the Bakufu decided to have all actor troupes, creating a new headache for themselves instead: Wakashu: Beautiful Youths. Often male, these young Kabuki actors inspired many models of the Bijin-ga we know today, and certainly would have inspired the worldly pleasures which the Ukiyo-e Heimin described as Bijin-ga.[3] Asobi, Toransujendā and Suijin alike flocked to see them in all their naped (when the nape is naked) glory.

I use naped because this truly was a unique occurrence where all the people performing were getting it all out on display for the public. Kabuki in this way was where you went to see the latest Beauties, wearing the latest trends, and being provocative in a time of rapid upheaval of society as the country flocked into the new Edo capital of the Tokugawa, today known as Tokyo. Like the youthquake after WWII in Britain, the century long wars of the Sengoku Jidai had made people wary of conservative living and ideals and had begun to become more lax in their ending of Samsara, instead craving a more sexual, fashionable and youthful world of worldly pleasures. Napes and wrists were everywhere, and their audience members comprised of this mobile new class of the early Chonin.[4]

So Kanei women and the later Wakashu certainly were the proto-Bijin model. By the Jokyo era, Kabuki was probably the most popular Heimin entertainment, the Anime of its day really. Torii was born into the world of Kabuki, as the son of a known Kabuki actor. In 1688 Kiyonobu moved with his father to Edo and by the 1690s, he had begun his artistic career.[1] The pair both designed signboards which often used large calligraphic style writing, which required massive brushes to create the strokes wide enough to support the styles wide brushstrokes which seems to have become a staple in the lineart of Kiyonobu. Otherwise the man is rather boring to say he lived and worked during the Genroku era.

This dramatic artform employed Kiyonobu to make its billboards and promotional pamphlets depicting actors and troupes, thus feeding the Torii school into the masses as an art style. Many of which were recieved favourably as one of Bijin-ga actors which Kiyonobu eventually also branched out into as we can see below. His style over the years as solid Beni dyes became more available on the market also began to feature more solid reds, yellows and greens with typically conventional flat perspective of Ukiyo-e.[5]

Beauty in a Black Kimono (1710-1720, PD) Torii Kiyonobu I
Wakashu Dancer (c.1661-1694, PD) Hishikawa Moronobu
Shikomi-E (1661-1673) Anonymous

Kambun Beauty Silhouette (c1661-1699, PD) Anonymous

Dancer No.1 (c.1630-1670, PD) Suntory Museum of Art
Copy of the Hikone Screen (c1624-1639) Anonymous
Outdoor Amusement (c.1615, PD) Hasegawa Touhaku, Suntory Museum
O-Kuni performing Kabuki Byobu (c.1603-1613) Hasegawa, Kyoto National Museum

The Sidetracked Silhouette

I would like to sort of go down the line here of how we came to the S-shape silhouette first as well, as it intersects rather nicely with Kiyonobu's background in Kabuki and dance in Edo Japan. As we can see, Okuni clearly here is performing her licentious dancing during the early 17th century. This by the time of Outdoor Amusement depicts a conservative image of dancing, performed in Genna which would have been performed with the aid of a fan, which movements for such often required joints like the neck to be extended to show off the fan to the audience (sorry for the grain, blame copyright law I suppose). I hypothesise that it seems that at some point between 1604 and 1624, the S-shape silhouette began to become a frequent favourite of Kabuki actors which is where the silhoutte originates, something I previously was unaware of at the time I researched my first Bijin post.

This hypothesis is evident in The Hikone screen figure which shows us the definitively S-style silhouette coveted by the Kambun Master, which is popularly held to have been a silhouette performed by the Yuujo, but appears slyly on other wealthy peoples Byobu. Whether this was the work of the Machi-Eshi town painters or not is a mystery, but is plausible. It would certainly clear explain why an otherwise expensive painting of a courtesan exists, as these screens often were seen as far too luxurious to be made simply for worldly desires, and thus relegated to the Flower and Bird or depictions of Yamato-E and Buddhist retellings. Thus, a leading Chonin asking for a proto-Ukiyo Byobu from a Machi-Eshu or two rather unheeding-of-scripture noblepeople of the 1630s may be responsible. 

In the 1630s, the Japanese beauty standard was already a mixed bag, drawing from the Kano school impressions of foreigners (including Chinese, Portuguese, English etc) of the 1620s which depicted foreigners to sate Japanese curiosity about the wider world. Other Tosa school Yamato-E figures found in Fuzokuga genre paintings were used to depict the otherworldly Buddhist icons venerated as Japanese, and were depicted as never looking at the viewer to remind you they belonged to the world of the Pure Land plane. Only foreigners, Heimin and other plebians until the 1630s that is, would dare to glance back directly at their viewers.

These however were changing times, with the rise of the Chonin after the Tokugawa rose to power. And between 1620-1655, 'merchants like Kawamura Zuiken (1614-1700) who began as a cart-peddlar, and whose quick thinking after the 1657 great fire of Edo in buying local timber made him rich overnight' becoming the art patrons, replacing the old guards who only commissioned things like 'Amidha goes on a picnic', with 'Geishas go on a picnic'.[7] Suddenly, things had become rather less otherworldly, rather more, this-wordly as Japanese art began to be made for greater numbers of people than just the wealthy who could previously afford to have it all made and stored. The art inspiration thus began to turn from Buddhism and filial piety, into the base pleasures which inspired early Ukiyo-E (worldy pleasure pictures).

The next depiction of 'Dancers' is one of Fukuokas Important Cultural Properties and showcases Japanese dancing, very likely commissioned by a 'respectable' nudgenudgewinkwink Chonin. This portrait comes from a Kanei-Kambun 6 screen byobu which depicted 'graceful women' doing Japanese Hiogi dance. More than likely derived from Kabuki, this style of dance entertainment with fans was popular among Geiko who also operated around the Pleasure districts. As Japan became more Sakoku and less non-Sakoku, it may have been a push toward 'all things Japanese' (ie Hiogi fans) as a way for the upper classes to solidify, consolidate and qualify their positions in Japanese society, particularly after the events of the Shimabara Rebellion. Kuge thus preferred Wamono, rejecting the Western spirited branch of the Kano school which helped formed interest in wordly things in the first place in Momoyama era art.[6]

As Chonin of the 1640s/50s still wished to fit in so to speak, they may have ordered this silhouette as a way to say 'I like naped people', whilst also screaming to the old money, 'Im new money'. An easy way way in to this prestige vacuum created by the Sankin Kotai was to hire artists like Kano Yukinobu, which also saw a return to the wordly beauties of Kabuki, with a bit of Kano (ie dirty worldly bodies to the old money) sprinkled in. This resulted in the end, in what came to be known as the Kambun Beauty, who were mostly modelled after courtesans which their Komin painter clientele created. The pendulum had truly swung by the 1660s to give rise to the Chonin's fleshy aesthetical S-shape silhouette, recognisable in the many works of early Ukiyo-E artists due it being a trademark of the Kambun Master himself and his school, who are known to have frequented the wordly world of Kabuki and the pleasure districts. This is seen in our white Kosode clad Wakashu above.

The next image which will hopefully be familiar then, is the Shikomi-E or preparation picture, sneakily creeping in the S-Shape silhouette as a form of high art, in turn drawing from the Kabuki culture of high art the Kano school represented. This merging of figures with worldly pleasures and more 'Wamono' styles such as Yamato-E themes and aesthetics created the Bijin-ga genre by the 1670s with the silhouette derived from Kabuki a staple of the late Kambun Beauty. 

The late Kambun Beauty in turn was the model for Hishikawa Moronobu as seen above, who by now in using the silhouette was carrying on a Japanese art tradition and which as we see is finally taken on by Kiyonobu, who was in turn inspired by the winding posture, graces and charms of Japanese popular aesthetics and beauty standards. These were shaped heavily by the anti-foreigner climate of the Sakoku period, create by the Bakufu who in 1685 banned all texts on translations related to Christianity in fear it may spread Christianity among the masses, disrupting their hold on power it should be pointed out, which was only lifted in 1720, thus allowing for Rangaku (Dutch studies | 蘭学 ) to commence once more. Thus Wamono was a keyword in the creation of the standards of the day in promoting Japanese anything, particularly images of who was beautiful and who was not as these images became more widely circulated in Japan.

The Kabuki Impact

Thus when we talk about the impact Kabuki had on Bijin-ga, we can see quite how much it impacted popular culture and art. Kiyonobus art style consciously emulated the poses in Kabuki.[2] These often revealed the nape, wrists and occassionally ankles of their human figures in a then licentious display of skin. Kiyonobu also abandons Matabei's and Moronobu's attempts at Qiyun, instead aiming for a more grounded flat-perspective. It is telling that without his bold lines how much movement and humanity is really lost in his Bijin-ga compared to Moronobus original in this way.

Intriguingly in comparing the two, Kiyonobu also reveals how commercial his Bijin-ga are, in the hiding of certain fleshy parts and the motifs his Kosode carry. Moronobus motif are costly, timely procedures of handcrafted Shibori drums, expensive Beni and the spatial arrangement of Ma denoting a high minded Komin clientele and audience. Kiyonobu on the other hand evokes a more middle class nouveau riche ideal, where Beni is randomly everywhere and peonies, a generic popular sort of auspicious floral arrangement. 

Arguably Kiyonobu's Bijin here is attempting to relate itself to a tradition of beautiful historical art when it hides the nape more subtly than Moronobu, and the fleshy foot itself is not displayed but instead covered in Tabi socks in a kind of moral debate about revealing the flesh. Thus when we see Kiyonobus 'Bijin-ga', it is not the Komin variant of beautiful courtesans, but the commercial world of Beauties which are permissable to plaster above the theatrical troupes door where all the public will see. The Kabuki Bijin is an appeal to the masses of the standard Japanese beauty rather than the particularly individualistic or original style Moronobu had in comparison. The Kabuki Bijin is thus the beginning of the commerical and widespread appeal of Bijin-ga to the public it would seem.

The Commercial Bijin

We can see how Kabuki played its role decisively in the creation of the Bijin-ga genre when we consider the influence it had on the Torii school and Kiyonobu particularly. What in Moronobu's day has to be labelled as a 'dancer', Kiyonobu simply labels by 1700 as a 'Beauty'. This apparent deft nature with the brush and business minded conservatism clearly was a winning strategy as it allowed the Torii school to continue as the defining Ukiyo-E or really Kabuki related artistic style of the 18th century. This particularly included the Ando's or Kaigetsudo school.[2] Thus contextually, from Kabuki as a licentious artform and the merging of Kano school patronage by the Chonin and Komin castes, we see the emergence of Kiyonobu who uses these models to 'harken back' to an ideal of Japanese beauty inspired by a century of Kabuki, which Kiyonobu directly used to make his Bijin's posture, clothing and aesthetic whilst retaining an air of commercial business acumen to his Bijinga prints, due to the Sakoku-shaped policies and regulations in which time he operated under in balancing new middle class expectations and Wamono expectations of acceptability, in the more Yoshida Hanbei style of picture creation than Moronobu and his artistical bent.

Bibliography

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torii_Kiyonobu_[2I

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torii_school

[3] See A Gay Old Time in Bijin #1

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabuki

[5] For Tan-E and Beni-E see Fabrics #10

[6] See The Development of the Human Figure in Japanese Art to that of the Bijin-ga in Bijin #1

[7] Search Stabilisation; also see Essay #8, Bijin #3, #6 & #8

Footnote: Yes I like ranting about the S-shape silhouette. Why? Becuase it is mostly original research so I am quite proud to have it out from context. Good day Xem.

Bijin Series Timeline

11th century BCE

- The Ruqun becomes a formal garment in China (1000 BCE) [Coming Soon]

8th century BCE

- Chinese clothing becomes highly hierarchical (771 BCE) [Coming Soon]

0000 Current Era

7th century

Asuka Bijin (from 600) [Coming Soon]

8th century

- Introduction of Chinese Tang Dynasty clothing (710)

- Sumizuri-e (710)

- Classical Chinese Art ; Zhou Fang (active 766-805) ; Qiyun Bijin

15th century 

- Fuzokuga Painting schools; Kano (1450-1868) and Tosa (1330-1690) 

- Machi- Eshi painters; 1336-1650? [Coming Soon] 

16 century 

- Nanbanjin Art (1550-1630)

- Byobu Screens (1580-1670)

 - End of Sengoku Jidai brings Stabilisation policy (1590-1615)  

17th century  

- Land to Currency based Economy Shift (1601-1655)

- Early Kabuki Culture (1603-1673) ; Yakusha-e or Actor Prints

- Sumptuary legislation in reaction to the wealth of the merchant classes (1604-1685) 

- Regulation of export and imports of foreign trade in silk and cotton (1615-1685)  

Iwasa Matabei (active 1617-1650) ; Yamato-e Bijin  

The Hikone Screen (c.1624-1644) [Coming Soon]

- Sankin-Kotai (1635-1642) creates mass Urbanisation  

- Popular culture and print media production moves from Kyoto to Edo (1635-1650); Kiyohara Yukinobu (1650-1682) ; Manji Classical Beauty

- Shikomi-e (1650-1670) and Kakemono-e which promote Androgynous Beauties;

 Iwasa Katsushige (active 1650-1673) ; Kojin Bijin

- Mass Urbanisation instigates the rise of Chonin Cottage Industry Printing (1660-1690) ; rise of the Kabunakama Guilds and decline of the Samurai

- Kanazoshi Books (1660-1700); Koshokubon Genre (1659?-1661)

- Shunga (1660-1722); Abuna-e

Kanbun Master/School (active during 1661-1673) ; Maiko Bijin 

- Hinagata Bon (1666 - 1850)

Yoshida Hanbei (active 1664-1689) ; Toned-Down Bijin

- Asobi/Suijin Dress Manuals (1660-1700)

- Ukiyo-e Art (1670-1900)

Hishikawa Moronobu (active 1672-1694) ; Wakashu Bijin

- The transit point from Kosode to modern Kimono (1680); Furisode, Wider Obi 

- The Genroku Osaka Bijin (1680 - 1700) ; Yuezen Hiinakata

Sugimura Jihei (active 1681-1703) ; Technicolour Bijin 

Hishikawa Morofusa (active 1684-1704) [Coming Soon]

Miyazaki Yuzen (active 1688-1736) ; Genroku Komin and Wamono Bijin 

Torii Kiyonobu (active 1688 - 1729) : The Commercial Bijin

Furuyama Moromasa (active 1695-1748)

18th century

Nishikawa Sukenobu (active 1700-1750) [Coming Soon]

Kaigetsudo Ando (active 1700-1736) [Coming Soon]

Okumura Masanobu (active 1701-1764)

Kaigetsudo Doshin (active 1704-1716) [Coming Soon]

Baioken Eishun (active 1710-1755) [Coming Soon]

Kaigetsudo Anchi (active 1714-1716) [Coming Soon]

    1717 Kyoho Reforms

Miyagawa Choshun (active 1718-1753) [Coming Soon]

Miyagawa Issho (active 1718-1780) [Coming Soon]

Nishimura Shigenaga (active 1719-1756) [Coming Soon]

Matsuno Chikanobu (active 1720-1729) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonobu II (active 1725-1760) [Coming Soon]

Kawamata Tsuneyuki (active 1736-1744) [Coming Soon]

Miyagawa Shunsui (active from 1740-1769) [Coming Soon]

Ishikawa Toyonobu (active 1745-1785) [Coming Soon]

Tsukioka Settei (active 1753-1787) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonaga (active 1756-1787) [Coming Soon]

Shunsho Katsukawa (active 1760-1793) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Toyoharu (active 1763-1814) [Coming Soon]

Suzuki Harunobu (active 1764-1770) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonaga (active 1765-1815) [Coming Soon]

Kitao Shigemasa (active 1765-1820) [Coming Soon]

Maruyama Okyo (active 1766-1795) [Coming Soon]

Kitagawa Utamaro (active 1770-1806) [Coming Soon]

Kubo Shunman (active 1774-1820) [Coming Soon]

Tsutaya Juzaburo (active 1774-1797) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunimasa (active from 1780-1810) [Coming Soon]

Tanehiko Takitei (active 1783-1842) [Coming Soon]

Katsukawa Shuncho (active 1783-1795) [Coming Soon]

Choubunsai Eishi (active 1784-1829) [Coming Soon]

Eishosai Choki (active 1786-1808) [Coming Soon]

Rekisentei Eiri (active 1789-1801) [Coming Soon] [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Ukiyo-e_paintings#/media/File:Rekisentei_Eiri_-_'800),_Beauty_in_a_White_Kimono',_c._1800.jpg]

Chokosai Eisho (active 1792-1799) [Coming Soon]

Kunimaru Utagawa (active 1794-1829) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Toyokuni II (active 1794 - 1835) [Coming Soon]

Ryūryūkyo Shinsai (active 1799-1823) [Coming Soon]

19th century

Teisai Hokuba (active 1800-1844) [Coming Soon]

Totoya Hokkei (active 1800-1850) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunisada Toyokuni III (active 1800-1865) [Coming Soon]

Urakusai Nagahide (active from 1804) [Coming Soon]

Kitagawa Tsukimaro (active 1804 - 1836)

Kikukawa Eizan (active 1806-1867) [Coming Soon]

Keisai Eisen (active 1808-1848) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (active 1810-1861) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Hiroshige (active 1811-1858) [Coming Soon]

Yanagawa Shigenobu (active 1818-1832) [Coming Soon]

Utagawa Kunisada II (active 1844-1880) [Coming Soon]

Toyohara Kunichika (active 1847-1900) [Coming Soon]

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (active 1850-1892) [Coming Soon]

Toyohara Chikanobu (active 1875-1912) [Coming Soon]

Kiyokata Kaburaki (active 1891-1972) [Coming Soon]

Goyo Hashiguchi (active 1899-1921) [Coming Soon]

20th century

Yumeji Takehisa (active 1905-1934) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kotondo (active 1915-1976) [Coming Soon]

Yamakawa Shūhō (active 1927-1944) [Coming Soon]

Social Links

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Sunday, November 14, 2021

岩左勝重 | Iwasa Katsushige | 1650-1673 | Bijin #9

Iwasa Katsushige (active 1650-1673), was the son of Iwasa Matabei. His best known work is his Three Dancing Samurai. Katsushige shows the transition most clearly between the marked progression from the permissive (by the standards of the day) of the Kan'ei era (1624-1644) to lurid Fuzokuga E from their beginnings as classical Buddhist and Japanese Genre depictions such as Matabei in 1640-1650, which drifted over into the intense flaming world of Ukiyo-e by the time style of the Kambun Master had come into vogue in the 1660s.[7][9] 

In Katsushige's lifetime, Japanese society changed vastly. Over his career, the most popular or acceptable painting style would shift from Fuzokuga painting styles, under the influence of the new artisan class as a result of the widening stabilising effects of the policies put in place by the Tokugawa, who helped end the Sengoku Jidai using stability to consolidate their control over the patchwork fiefs of Japan. As the capital and with it, power, shifted to the East toward the new Tokugawa Capital of Edo from Kyoto, culture significantly changed. The Hikone screen is a good example of how more permissive figure painting became in the Kanei era (1624-1644) in the aftermath. This era came with the implementation of Kabuki, and the proliferation of printed and painted materials such as Shikomi-e and Kakemono-e of compendiums now available in travelling lending libraries (foldout carts) which promoted the Japanese androgynous beauty, or Bijin and subsequent formalisation of the Bijin-ga genre in Japanese art from  (1624-1673). 

Whilst it is most likely that Katsushige was influenced by the oeuvre he was surrounded by, we do not know of his immediate formative tutors or even his whereabouts in these years. By estimation and guesswork to fill in the blanks, speculatively Katsushige may have been influenced like his father by the Kano school of art in his earlier years between 1640-1650, but certainly he certainly moved over to be influenced by the Ukiyo-e world in the second half of his lifetime and career as an artist himself, particularly in the evolution of the human figure in courtly painting during the Kanei era onto Kakemono by the 1650's, and as the recognisable Bijin in the 1660-1670s which was supported by the rise of the Chonin patronage of the Ukiyo-e genre.

Early Ukiyo-e in Print and Technology

By the 1640's with the beginning of Sakoku, Japan had a greater need to distinguish itself and as such beauty had come to have greater meaning under Wamono, which was used to push a national narrative of ethnocentric Japaneseness. By the 1650s, this emerged with new vigour in the push of art patronage by Merchants and the Bakufu who favoured uniquely 'Japanese' styles and tastes which saw an increase of the work of local Komin work. This informed the Kambun beauty standards, with Komin creating Shikomi-E, being work which greatly interested the Komin of the time, mostly courtesan beauties. This precursor to Ukiyo-e, built upon the Buddhist figures found in the Tosa schools Yamato-e Fuzokuga figures.

The transition from Fuzokuga-e to Ukiyo-e, was brought about during this period by the aforementioned Komin class.[6] In the time when Fuzokuga-e were produced, morals allowed for men to acceptably pine after other young adults and monastic boy crushes. In the time of Ukiyo-e, morals had moved to such a point that the Komin now catered for radically different clientele. That is that Komin and their clients were producing, consuming and engaging the acts depicted in Shunga and Wakashudo, proudly hanging Kakemono from the Tokonoma of their boy toys. It was this Ukiyo-e world which saw rapid shifts and a flowering in the production of Bijin-ga, as a medium and trope heavily favoured by the Ukiyo Komin painters.

Three Dancing Samurai (c1649) Iwasa Katsushige

We can clearly see here from the earlier work of Katsushige, is that whilst he was clearly a reknowned or painter of some merit; his work has survived intact after all for 300 years; he did not deviate heavily from the established classical painting styles of figures in Japanese painting schools in the first half of the 17th century. Whilst the faces here may not particularly seem like much, may I point you to the figure on the far left of the image. The 'samurai' in the black kosode has a particularly prominent pair of eyebrows in comparison to the eyebrows of his fellow Wakashu dancer on the far right. It is this small quirk in the detail which gives us a clue as to how Katsushige established his own artistic style, as this small quirk is an artistic license of sort in deviation from the established and simple facial features to my knowledge of other prominent artistic styles of the day. The eyebrows may emphasise that this is a man with particularly masculine features for example, or their wisdom perhaps, allowing the viewer a more personal connection with the figure by differentiating their facial features, albeit mildly.

The eyebrow deviation is interesting, because other prominent figure styles of the era emphasised uniform faces, in order to detract from the vanity of individualism or charm of an individual from overpowering the text accompanying images, which mostly at this time accompanied holy texts. Figures were there to encourage the reader to engage with the expected religious morals and virtues espoused by these texts and religious leaders, not to encourage vanity projects like Bijin Kakemono. The current example today may be religious comic strips and soft core porn. This changed drastically over Katsushige's career as a painter.

 The Popular Culture Kambun Figure

Grand Shimabara Courtesan (c.1661-1673) Yoshi

Beautiful pictures prior to 1650 are practically nonexistent, and until Matabei, even portraiture was seen as almost tantamount to a simple exercise in vanity. This tradition stemmed from the depiction of the human figure in the Tosa and Kano schools, who depicted figures slightly differently. Tosa depicted figures in the Yamato-e format, that is scenes from everyday Japanese life or pseudo-/historical accounts. The Kano school depicted moreso the Fuzokuga style which incorporated Classical Chinese accounts and brush style painting in gold leaf.[7] These scenes were those which the upper Kuge classes venerated in their scenes of devout religious moral stories which accompanied Buddhist texts, and thus were not made for aesthetical consumption in a hedonistic or tasteful manner.

Instead, after Matabei introduced the idea of portraiture in an 'art for arts sake' manner by painting himself in 1650 on the basis of the appreciation of Tang Chinese figure painting, these gradually filtered into the Komin sphere as an acceptable art form to paint, given Matabei's high prestige as a court painter. After a development in the Manji era, by the Kambun era the ideal of the pursuit of Beautiful figures was a socially acceptable subject to paint. With a transfer over to the Chonin also afoot as the economy shifted from land to money based economy model, Chonin and Komin tastes also deemed the Beautiful figures amongs themselves as worthy of being recorded and with this, the Bijin-ga figure was born.

The Kambun beauty held fast to ideals about Buddhist beauty and mixed it in with more modern 17th century philosophy about the human figure of pious or historical figures in simple costume. Kosode often stuck to 2-3 colours, figures flowed but were not sensual, and depictions of beauties generally stuck to safe source materials to do so at first. It was deemed societally acceptable to paint subjects such as Maiko and Shikomi at first due to the fact that they were performers of the high arts, although by the end of the era the images certainly could be read in other more licentious ways. Androgynous figures were (and still are) also heavily in vogue for setting beauty standards.

Shikomi-E; or Young Dancer Preparation Pictures; allowed Komin to subtly depict the more sensual nature of the human figure in an acceptable format under the frowsty standards of the day. They were a gradual move from the tightly controlled religious images of figures seen as acceptable by prior societal standards, venturing out into the new artform of Bijin-ga. The Shikomi-e appeal as drawn in the Kambun Master (1660-1673) style derived from the emerging Iwasa style of merging the classical Chinese Tang painting styles and Qiyun aesthetical quality with contemporaneous Japanese painting styles of Yamato-e.[7][8] This arose from Japanese acceptability politics at court, which saw Classical Chinese beauty and aesthetics merge with Wamono, to form at first religious, then aesthetical, then beautiful depictions of the human figure. 

Shikomi-e Hikone Screen Copy depicting a Yujo walking a dog (c.1645-1669) Anonymous

The style particularly used the S shape silhouette, an exposed nape, lavish Kosode and lengthy black hair worn by Kagema, Tayuu, Oiran and Yujo Courtesans in the Yuukaku ( Lawful Pleasure district | 遊廓). This silhouette and format followed the example set in Chinese Classical painting of elegance and certain hairstyles were also imitated in later years as well.[7] These performers were often the lovers and muses of the Komin who would become their frequent clientele. As time went on, performers were increasingly being painted alongside Kabuki performers as subjects as well. 

This was a painting style which went alongside Kanazoshi ( Kana Books | 仮名草子 ) [popular / likely high circulation between 1630 - 1660] and Shunga (as we know it being popular from 1580-1660), thus developing societal beauty standards of acceptable Bijin-ga. These were both relatively new print formats for the masses, with the technology only being decades old in Japan, written by writers like Asai Ryoi (1612-1691) whose characters frequented brothels, just like his intended audience. Indeed, it was Ryoi whose Ukiyo Monogatari ( Tales of the Floating World | 1666) encouraged and popularised the Kambun Heimin hedonistic lifestyle which came to be known as Ukiyo-e.[10] These soft core and danger-pictures of Kanazoshi were the precursor to Saikaku (1642-1693), who would go on to form the Ukiyo-zoushi ( Floating world Books | 浮世草子 ) genre from 1680-1770.[11]

Katsushige's Contribution

Untitled (c.1670-1673) FromJapanWithLove

The surviving works of Katsushige are interesting, as they acquiesce certain secrets about Kambun KTC beauty standards, the arrival of Furisode as we know them and how these intersect with Ukiyo-e. KanKTC was particularly transgressive, being the end-labours of the Komin and Chonin castes. This particular work above for example, shows how the Furisode, a garment which had evolved from the 1550s as a garment for samurai people, to by the 1670s have sleeves long enough to trail along the floor worn by the young as a symbol of their decadent and lavish youth. 

Katsushiges personal contribution here provides again, a more personal or unique face. The rest of the image is predictably of its time. The Kosode kept to a simple colour scheme, the posture a well worn Shikomi-E standard, and the proportions, focus and subject matter standard for the time. In terms of development of his style over the decades here, Katsushige clearly though has fallen into the Ukiyo-e crowd, or that beauty standards at the least had become heavily reliant on the 'lower' classes taste to inform popular cultural opinion on wider societal beauty standards by the end of the Kambun era, which had deemed figures by then to fall more into the realm of the Beautiful Lover trope which Komin often favoured then. 

 The Kojin Bijin 

In a Confucian manner, Katsushige has refined his fathers work into a more distinct set of motifs and tropes. Therefore in context, we see how Katsushiges' Bijin followed in the ouevre of his father, carrying their own facial expressions and sybaritic Kimono, free flowing Kosode and Kitsuke than in Matabei's comparatively stiff figures. The facial expressions and features being the most striking difference, as Katsushige's features are defined and clearly more solid than those of his father, as representative of the times (Kanei and Kambun) each drew in. 

Perhaps the key difference here though, is that by the second half of Katsushige's career, Katsushige was operating in the world of early Ukiyo-e. A world which Matabei's work whilst a portraiture prototype was certainly not as lurid as the Shunga then beginning to be produced en masse, and informed by the popular masses rather than at the whims of court nobles and their high brow art friends. It is in this vein, that we see that Katsushige formed his own pre-cursor beauty, the Kojin Bijin (individual personal beauty), reflecting the shift in how the human figure in Japanese art from Court painters in the Kanei to Komin painters by the Kambun saw and understood the human figure in aesthetical merits. Matabei being a Buddhist court painter, and Katsushige being an elevated Ukiyo-e painter, in the era which gave rise to the Bijin-ga genre aesthetic under the patronage of the lower class artist and their subject matters by the Enpo era (1673-1681). 

Bibliography.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lan_Caihe

[2] https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-08-05/Would-magpies-help-reunite-China-s-mythological-lovers--IUw0yXfUL6/index.html

[3] https://asianbotanical.ku.edu/plum-0

[4] https://propertyinsight.com.my/why-does-vmgzcs/sparrow-symbolism-japan-24ab02

[5] https://www.christies.com/features/5-Victorian-beauties-and-what-they-tell-us-about-the-time-in-which-they-were-painted-6799-1.aspx

[6] See Essay #8

[7] See Bijin #1

[8] See Bijin #7

[9] See Bijin #6

[10] Views of the Floating World, Money L. Hickman, 1978, Vol. 76, p.5, MFA Bulletin

[11] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukiyo-z%C5%8Dshi

Bijin Series Timeline 

8th century

- Introduction of Chinese Tang Dynasty clothing (710)

- Sumizuri-e (710)

- Classical Chinese Art ; Zhou Fang (active 766-805) ; Qiyun Bijin

15th century 

- Fuzokuga Painting schools; Kano (1450-1868) and Tosa (1330-1690)

16 century 

- Nanbanjin Art (1550-1630)

- Byobu Screens (1580-1670)

 - End of Sengoku Jidai brings Stabilisation policy (1590-1615)  

17th century  

- Land to Currency based Economy Shift (1601-1655)

- Early Kabuki Culture (1603-1673) ; Yakusha-e or Actor Prints

- Sumptuary legislation in reaction to the wealth of the merchant classes (1604-1685) 

- Regulation of export and imports of foreign trade in silk and cotton (1615-1685)  

Iwasa Matabei (active 1617-1650) ; Yamato-e Bijin  

- Sankin-Kotai (1635-1642) creates mass Urbanisation  

- Popular culture and print media production moves from Kyoto to Edo (1635-1650); Kiyohara Yukinobu (1650-1682) ; Manji Classical Beauty

- Shikomi-e (1650-1670) and Kakemono-e which promote Androgynous Beauties;

 Iwasa Katsushige (active 1650-1673) ; Kojin Bijin

- Mass Urbanisation instigates the rise of Chonin Cottage Industry Printing (1660-1690) ; rise of the Kabunakama Guilds and decline of the Samurai

- Kanazoshi Books (1660-1700); Koshokubon Genre (1659?-1661)

- Shunga (1660-1722); Abuna-e

Kanbun Master/School (active during 1661-1673) ; Maiko Bijin 

- Hinagata Bon (1666 - 1850)

Yoshida Hanbei (active 1664-1689) ; Toned-Down Bijin

- Asobi/Suijin Dress Manuals (1660-1700)

- Ukiyo-e Art (1670-1900)

Hishikawa Moronobu (active 1672-1694) ; Wakashu Bijin

- The transit point from Kosode to modern Kimono (1680); Furisode, Wider Obi 

- The Genroku Osaka Bijin (1680 - 1700) ; Yuezen Hiinakata

Sugimura Jihei (active 1681-1703) ; Technicolour Bijin 

Miyazaki Yuzen (active 1688-1736) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonobu (active 1698 - 1729) [Coming Soon]

Social Links

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Sunday, August 8, 2021

岩佐 又兵衛 | Iwasa Matabei | 1578 - 1650 | Bijin #6

Iwasa Matabei (active 1617-1650) was the son of the Samurai Araki Murashige (d.1586) who served under Oda Nobunaga. After his father's death and subsequent upbringing in Kyoto in 1579, he took his mothers name and pioneered the later depiction of figures in Fuzokuga or Genre Painting in Japanese Art.[7] Classical art forms such as Ink wash and Full colour painting were part of Iwasa's portfolio which combined both the Fuzokuga of the Tosa and Kano schools. His work is known for its early use of figures, who characteristically often have large heads and delicate body features as depicted in Classical Asian figure art history. His work is often today seen as the forerunning link or influence between the divergent mid 17th century Classical Japanese High and Low Arts of Yamato-e and Ukiyo-e.[1] He is therefore regarded as the 'founder of Ukiyo-e'.[7]

Self portrait (1650) Iwasa 'Katsumochi' Matabei

The changing Japanese Figure

Classical Buddhist notions of beauty imported from the Asian mainland held that portraiture was a vain venture, such as idolatry in some Christian traditions was considered. Therefore until the later Muromachi period, figures were kept in small numbers with little detail in Japanese art, which reflected the standards of the Buddhist mainland traditions, particularly that of Chinese artists. However by the beginning of the Edo period (1603-1868), this had begun to change. Primarily this change came with the influx of foreigners such as the Portuguese, who are depicted lavishly in Nanbanjin Art of the period.  During the first quarter of the 17th century on with Stabilisation policy and the end of the warring period, Japanese merchants became wealthier than the upper classes who did not trade with these foreigners. As such, the reins of power changed hands and a new taste came about reflecting these changing circumstances.



Kano School (c.1599) Kano Eitoku | Tosa School (c.1517) Tosa Mitsunobu 
Fuzokuga or Genre Painting, here Historical & Religious Scenes

With this in mind, Fuzokuga painting was developed from the branching arts of the second quarter of the 16th century which still prioritised the conveyance of Buddhist art and teachings, but had begun to open its purse strings to the artisans. Figures by the middle of the century therefore, became not indicators of the mortal and simply carcasses which carried Buddhist high-minded morals in lengthy scrolls and screens depicting Monogatari decrying the wicked, but instead evermore a representation of the Everyday. Art during the 1630's is a prompt move from the religious to depicting the lives of wealthy Chonin. However printing was not yet in full effect. Whilst a limited number of Sumizuri-e were printed, these were often seen as simply expensive and technologically advanced E-maki ( 絵巻 | Hand-scrolls). Instead of the monochrome images in these, Artists and Wealthy patrons often commissioned instead Kakemono, or hanging wall scrolls to be admired in the Tokonoma (  | wall alcove) which were normally in full colour. Before 1615 these were incredibly rare, but became more prominent later on.

Classical Beauties

It was in this climate that Iwasa would have begun his painting career, one which saw incredibly early portrayals of figures. Often these were based on Edo notions of Classical beauty, such as the works of Zhou Fang (Chinese scroll painter active in Tang China) and Japanese Heian figures, which would have been considered suitable to being committed to eternal representation. Iwasa was under the tutelage of Kano Naisen (1570–1616), who would more than likely have introduced Iwasa to Nanbanjin art, which prominently featured figures in its depictions. Iwasa therefore trained under the Kano school in his youth.[1][3] In Kyoto Iwasa would have studied traditional Japanese and Chinese art, traditions and subjects.

Nanban Byobu (c.1600) Kano Naisen

Tosa was known for its Yamato-e (Classical Japanese depictions) and Kano for the rendering by Japanese artists of Chinese folklore and history.[2] Naisen who is remembered today for his byobu with figures would have for the time been creating radically new forms of traditional Kano art by incorporating such lavishly detailed contemporary figures, rather than depicting classical or mythological figures. With the death of his mentor in the Kano school however in 1616 he became involved in the court of Matsudaira Tadanao (1595-1650) by 1617, where he began signing his work as 'Katsumochi' and 'Doun'.[7] Some of his wealthier patrons may include Karasumaru Mitsuhiro (1579-1638), Masaaki Atsukai (dates unknown), and Sonjun Hosshinno (1591-1653). 

Tale of Genji (c.1600-1638) Tosa Mitsunori

Fortunately for us, Matabei, most likely considered himself a social pariah of the upper class world of courtiers and princes, felt more at home with the comparably lower class Machishu ( 町衆 | old money wealthy Kyoto merchants).[8] By 1620-1630, it is hypothetically viable that Iwasa had begun to form a reputation for his style, and formed a circle of like-minded people around himself who helped him to develop his understanding and appreciation of classical and applied art and eventually it is believed he may have studied under Tosa Mitsunori in Sakai until 1635.[5][7] By 1637 Iwasa had moved out to Edo, becoming a Chonin himself.[6][7] In the late 1630's with his connections and now established personal portraiture style, he was commissioned by Tokugawa Iemitsu (1604-1651) to draw portraits of the 36 Poetry Immortals (1640).[1] Other painted commissions in the style included the Ise, Genji and Horie Monogatari.[9]

The Four Pleasures (c.1624, CC) Iwasa Matabei 

It seems that by the time Iwasa had established himself as the successor of the Tosa School, he often frequently flipped between the Kano and Tosa sensibility in the theoretical idolatry of depicting contemporary figures his own teachers straddled and therefore Iwasa himself broke away from the repetive molds of Kakemono, Handfan and Byobu depicting traditional war tales like the Horie to instead depict modern portraiture more in line with the style of the Tosa. Seemingly the first of many Japanese artists to do so, he is said to have drawn figures with a keen sense of wit and charm to his figures which broke with tradition by humanising the figure whilst keeping within expected stylistic confines of the day, having a highly down to earth character to his approach to depiction.[4] 

Characteristic components of the Iwasa style include large heads, humourous posture and highly refined facial and appendage detail applied with fine brushes. Many of his poses such as The Four Pleasures often feature languishing, lounging or horizontal postures. As typical of the Tosa school, none of his figures ever face the viewer, frozen in place in their heavenly depictions of Buddhist lifestyle and behaviour. Whilst it is thought that his work was too upper-class to be related in any form to the lascivious world of Ukiyo-e, Iwasa and his students instead shows us the bridge Japanese art took in the depiction of figures as being something of High Art to Everyday Art, in providing the kindling so to speak for the proverbial Bijin Kindling of the 1670's Bijin Bonfire seen in works of Jihei and Moronobu.[1]

Seated Courtesan (c.1661-1688) Iwasa School in British Museum

Yamato-E Bijin

The Iwasa Bijin is therefore early High Art; presented in full colour, which appealed to the conservative patron or readers sensitivities providing a bridge between the cycles of Samsara. Iwasa has inadvertently in creating his own independent art in the Tosa style, developed figures to such an extent that he has created a new form of figure, the attractive figure, rather than simple figures for religious purposes. The beauty of Iwasa's style uses previously existing traditional art theory and combines that with increasingly 'baser' lower cultural influences, such as Naisen's contemporary Nanban ornate figurines and combines that with Tosa figurine art theory and Iwasa's knowledge and appreciation of Classical Chinese art to create his own modern style. His figures were for the Kanbun era, a cultural reset in the truest sense of the idea of that and opened doors for further artistic license in the future of the acceptable portrayal of figures. Whilst colour and material is traditionally aligned, artistic license here is the key to the Iwasa way. Body language, subtlety and delicate linework combine to create unique portraiture in this floating or transient world between Buddhist iconography art theory (the work itself that is) and the viewer, therefore transforming the possibility of figures as simply false idols to that of the Chonin ideal. That is a flesh and blood human idol which Chonin could look to for guidance and to reflect their own struggles and desires as members of the lower classes whilst still respectably depicting the Buddhist ideals they also admired and followed. This is reflected in Shikomi-e when we think of how a society with previously only portraiture of noble women, courtiers and nuns, all exemplars of good moral wives, could suddenly have the male gaze turned onto them. Again, the masquerade of respectable Buddhist icons of dancing artisans, who are in fact to the 17th century gentlemen of Japanese artisans simply Bijin. Thus allowing the birth of the Bijin-ga in a previously highly conservative art tradition priorly produced in temples to depictions of Maiko with their Eri slipping all over their delectable napes. The Iwasa Bijin, whilst not to the Genpei, but certainly to the Kanbun era, is therefore the Yamato-e Bijin. A depiction of a conservatively appropriate and Ga (refined) female beauty. Iwasa Bijin are bold for their time, breaking barriers of acceptability politics between the new and old money at the beginning of the Edo period during a period of new-found stability and spending after over 130 years of continous warring.


For more examples (I am limited legally by Copyright restrictions on what I can/cant show here):

1) https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-1340750 'Dallying Couples'

2) The Yamanaka Tokiwa Scrolls

3) https://alchetron.com/Iwasa-Matabei


Bibliography

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iwasa_Matabei

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tosa_school

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kan%C5%8D_Naizen

[4] https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG3703

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tosa_Mitsunori

[6] https://www.britannica.com/biography/Iwasa-Matabei 

[7] An illustration of the Ise monogatari : Matabei and the Two Worlds of Ukiyo, Sanoy Kita, 1984, pp.252-258, The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art

[8] https://www.japanese-wiki-corpus.org/history/Machi-shu.html

[9] https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/horie-monogatari-emaki-illustrated-tale-of-horie-iwasa-marabei/wAGvQnBxpyKeAw?hl=en

Bijin Series Timeline 

8th century

- Introduction of Chinese Tang Dynasty clothing (710)

- Sumizuri-e (710)

- Classical Chinese Art ; Zhou Fang (active 766-805) [Coming Soon]

15th century 

- Fuzokuga Painting schools; Kano (1450-1868) and Tosa (1330-1690)

16 century 

- Nanbanjin Art (1550-1630)

- Byobu Screens (1580-1670)

 - End of Sengoku Jidai brings Stabilisation policy (1590-1615)  

17th century  

- Early Kabuki Culture (1603-1673) ; Yakusha-e or Actor Prints

- Sumptuary legislation in reaction to the wealth of the merchant classes (1604-1685) 

- Regulation of export and imports of foreign trade in silk and cotton (1615-1685)  

Iwasa Matabei (active 1617-1650) ; Yamato-e Bijin  

- Sankin-Kotai (1635-1642) creates mass Urbanisation  

- Shikomi-e (1650-1670) and Kakemono-e which promote Androgynous Beauties; Iwasa Katsushige (active 1650-1673) [Coming Soon] 

- Mass Urbanisation instigates the rise of Chonin Cottage Industry Printing (from 1660) ; rise of the Kabunakama Guilds and decline of the Samurai

- Kanazoshi Books (1660-1700); Koshokubon Genre (1659?-1661)

- Shunga (1660-1722); Abuna-e

Kanbun Master/School (active during 1661-1673) ; Maiko Bijin 

- Hinagata Bon (1666 - 1850)

Yoshida Hanbei (active 1664-1689) ; Toned-Down Bijin

- Asobi/Suijin Dress Manuals (1660-1700)

- Ukiyo-e Art (1670-1900)

Hishikawa Moronobu (active 1672-1694) ; Wakashu Bijin

- The transit point from Kosode to modern Kimono (1680); Furisode, Wider Obi 

- The Genroku Osaka Bijin (1680 - 1700) ; Yuezen Hiinakata

Sugimura Jihei (active 1681-1703) ; Technicolour Bijin 

Miyazaki Yuzen (active 1688-1736) [Coming Soon]

Torii Kiyonobu (active 1698 - 1729) [Coming Soon]

Social Links

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Work

 Work has decided that for some reason, both this and next weekend have workdays on the weekend so Ive taken the opportunity to get my life-...