Sadahide
Utagawa Sadahide (歌川 貞秀, 1807 – c. 1878–79), also known as Gountei Sadahide (五雲亭 貞秀), was a Japanese artist best known for his prints in the ukiyo-e style as a member of the Utagawa school. His prints covered a wide variety of genres; amongst his best known are his Yokohama-e pictures of foreigners in Yokohama in the 1860s, a period when he was a best-selling artist. He was a member of the Tokugawa shogunate's delegation to the International Exposition of 1867 in Paris.[1]
Life and career
Sadahide was born Hashimoto Kenjirō (橋本兼次郎)[2] in 1807 in Fusa Province (modern Chiba Prefecture) in Shimōsa.[3] He joined Utagawa school master Kunisada's studio in the 1820s and become one of the master's most prominent students.[1] As a member of the school, he took on Utagawa as a surname, and also used the surname Gountei as an art name, and also used his birth surname as an art name late in his career.[3]
Sadahide's earliest known works are the illustrations for a book Misaogata Tsuge no Ogushi (操形黄楊小櫛, 1824), the first of many books he was to illustrate throughout his career. Most of his early works were bijin-ga portraits of beauties. In the 1830s and 1840s he broadened his output to landscapes and musha-e warrior prints.[1]
In the 1850s Sadahide began to become known for his prints of exotic locales. In c. 1850 he produced the five-volume Kaigai Shinwa (海外新話, New Overseas Stories) about the First Opium War in China, and in 1855 he produced the four-volume Kita Ezo zusetsu (北蝦夷図説, Northern Japan Illustrated), which depicted the Ainu people in Ezo, the name at the time for the northernmost parts of Japan. This interest expanded to maps: he produces prints of maps of Edo, Yokohama, Japan, and the world[4]—this last quite accurate and likely modeled after a Dutch example.[2] His largest map was a nine-sheet panorama of Yokohama with a breadth of two metres.[4]
In the 1859 to 1862[2] Sadahide produced a large number of Yokohama-e prints of foreigners and the goods they broguht to Japan after the country ended its self-imposed isolation in 1854. Among these prints was the series Edo meisho kenbutsu ijin, (江戸名所見物偉人, Foreigners Viewing Famous Places in Edo).[1] While there is scant evidence of the reception of these works, the number of extant copies suggests they were popular, and they appear to depict foreigners in a positive light. Several prints depict pleasant interactions between foreigner and Japanese figures, such as dining together or playing badminton. This in contrast to the philosophy of sonnō jōi ("revere the Emperor, expel the barbarians") that had gained currency since the Convention of Kanagawa of 1854.[5]
Sadahide also produced guidebooks to Yokohama, include one of five volumes in 1862–66 called Yokohama kaikō kenbun-shi (横浜開港見聞誌, Things seen and heard at the Yokohama open port). He details the eating habits and technology of Yokohama's foreign residents, and suggests the Japanese would do well to learn from the West with such statements as: "We are by nature emotional and want a quick profit, but nowadays the Japanese merchants in Yokohama are trying hard to follow the Western model of remaining calm." While these works emphasize contrasts between the Japanese and foreigners, they also dispel myths: Sadahide notes that not all foreigners are tall or have long noses, despite the stereotypes.[6]
Sadahide continued to make prints after moving to Nagasaki. There he made a panorama that was 10 metres (33 ft) long and produced books on the history and geography of Western lands.[2] He joined ten other artists as part of a delegation the Tokugawa shogunate sent to the International Exposition of 1867 in Paris,[1] where ten of his Edo views were exhibited.[2] The following year, it was reported he ranked the best-selling ukiyo-e artist. He died in 1878 or 1879,[1] shortly after producing a print of Yokohama the size of a tatami mat.[1]
The first exhibition dedicated to Sadahide's work was held in 1997, subtitled The ukiyo-e artist who flies in the sky (空飛ぶ浮世絵師 Sora tobu ukiyo-e-shi).[3]
- American on an Outing, 1861
- Chinese Men in Yokohama, c. 1860
- Lord Yoritomo Traveling to Kyoto (1), 1862
- Lord Yoritomo Traveling to Kyoto (2), 1862
- Lord Yoritomo Traveling to Kyoto (3), 1862
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Marks 2012, p. 144.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Meech 1986, p. 40.
- 1 2 3 Kanbara 2006, p. 148.
- 1 2 Steele 2003, p. 22.
- ↑ Steele 2003, pp. 22–23.
- ↑ Steele 2003, p. 24.
Works cited
- Kanbara, Mayumi (2006). "Gountei Sadahide". In Kobayashi, Tadashi. Ukiyo eshi retsuden 浮世絵師列伝. Bessatsu Taiyō (in Japanese). Heibonsha. pp. 148–149. ISBN 9784582944938.
- Marks, Andreas (2012). Japanese Woodblock Prints: Artists, Publishers and Masterworks: 1680–1900. Tuttle Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4629-0599-7.
- Meech, Julia (1986). The World of the Meiji Print: Impressions of a New Civilization. Weatherhill. ISBN 978-0-8348-0209-4.
- Steele, M. William (2003). Alternative Narratives in Modern Japanese History. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-40408-7.
External links
- Media related to Utagawa Sadahide at Wikimedia Commons
- Sadahide prints at ukiyo-e.org