Japanese Print "Adults and Children in a Village" by Hanabusa Itcho
Artist:Hanabusa Itcho
Title:Adults and Children in a Village
Date:1778
Details:More information...
Source:Japanese Art Open Database
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Description:
HANABUSA ITCHO (1652-1724) Adults and Children in a Village Date: c.1778 Size:Oban tate-e: 14.125" x 8.5" overall, laid down Condition: Good for age. Laid down to board, wormage. Impression: Very good. Color: Very good. A street scene in winter showing men clearing snow at top, children making a large snow ball at left, and another group of adults and children with a monk (?) to the lower right. I often wonder how these people of ancient Japan could run around half naked in the snow. Itcho was the founder of the Hanabusa school of painting. Born in Osaka, Itcho studied under kano yasunobu but was expelled from the studio as a rebel against the Kano tradition. In 1698, he was exiled to Miyakejima for a pictorial parody of the shogun's concubine; pardoned in 1709 he returned to Edo. Itcho was the creator of an original style, halfway between Kano and ukiyoe. Publication of non-ukiyo albums was not yet widespread during Itcho's lifetime and his sketches were thus published only posthumously, the last known being in 1778 by Rinsho. (biographical information from Images from the Floating World by Richard Lane, 1978, Switzerland).