Koryūsai
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Isoda Koryūsai (Script error: No such module "Lang"., 1735–1790) was a Japanese ukiyo-e print designer and painter active from 1769 to 1790.
Life and career
Koryūsai was born in 1735 and worked as a samurai in the service of the Tsuchiya clan. He became a masterless rōnin after the death of the head of the clan and moved to Edo (modern Tokyo) where he settled near Ryōgoku Bridge in the Yagenbori area. He became a print designer there under the art name Haruhiro in 1769, at first making samurai-themed designs. The ukiyo-e print master Harunobu died in 1770, and about that time Koryūsai began making prints in a similar style of life in the pleasure districts.Template:Sfn
Koryūsai was a prolific designer of individual prints and print series,Template:Sfn most of which appeared between 1769 and 1881.Template:Sfn
In 1782, Koryūsai applied for and received the Buddhist honour hokkyō ("Bridge of the Law")Template:Sfn from the imperial courtTemplate:Sfn and thereafter used the title as part of his signature. His output slowed from this time, though he continued to design prints until his death in 1790.Template:Sfn
Works
Koryūsai created a total of 2,500 known designs, or an average of four a week. According to art historian Allen Hockley, "Koryūsai may ... have been the most productive artist of the eighteenth century".Template:Sfn
The series Models for Fashion: New Designs as Fresh Young Leaves (Hinagata wakana no hatsumoyō, 1776–1781) ran for 140 prints, the longest known ukiyo-e print series of beauties. He designed at least 350 hashira-e pillar prints, numerous kachō-e bird-and-flower prints, a great number of shunga erotic prints, and others.Template:Sfn Ninety of his nikuhitsu-ga paintings are known, making him one of the most productive painters of the period.Template:Sfn
Legacy
Despite Koryūsai's productivity and popularity—both in his time and amongst later collectors—his work has attracted little scholarship.Template:Sfn The first ukiyo-e histories written in the West in the 19th century elevated certain artists as exemplars; Koryūsai's work came to be seen as too indebted to Harunobu, who died in 1770, and inferior to that of Kiyonaga, whose peak period came in the 1880s.Template:Sfn An example is Woldemar von Seidlitz's Script error: No such module "Lang". ("History of Japanese colour prints", 1897), the most popular of the early ukiyo-e histories, which paints Koryūsai as a successor to Harunobu and a rival of Kiyonaga in the 1770s who slipped into mediocrity and imitation of his rival by the end of the decade.Template:Sfn Interest lay mainly in the details of Koryūsai's life—a samurai who received court honours was unusual in the proletarian world of ukiyo-e.Template:Sfn In 2021, contemporary woodblock printmaker David Bull created a series of 12 prints depicting nature scenes adapted from Koryūsai's designs.[1][2]
His work is held in the permanent collections of several museums worldwide, including the British Museum,[3] the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,[4] the Carnegie Museum of Art,[5] the Princeton University Art Museum,[6] the Minneapolis Institute of Art,[7] the University of Michigan Museum of Art,[8] the Hermitage Museum,[9] the Suntory Museum of Art,[10] the Israel Museum,[11] the Krannert Art Museum,[12] the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,[13] the Philadelphia Museum of Art,[14] the Honolulu Museum of Art,[15] the Museum of New Zealand,[16] the Brooklyn Museum,[17] the Ashmolean Museum,[18] the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco,[19] the Freer Gallery of Art,[20] the Indianapolis Museum of Art,[21] the Chazen Museum of Art,[22] the Portland Art Museum,[23] and the Kimbell Art Museum.[24]
References
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Works cited
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