[Go Back]  [New Search]    Details for Kobayashi Kiyochika (1847-1915) "February, a Snowy Evening at Matchiyama- Kisaragi- Matsuchi"         

Compare artworks
Compare all

28801

28802

February, a Snowy Evening at Matchiyama- Kisaragi- Matsuchi

Click on above image for larger scan

February, a Snowy Evening at Matchiyama- Kisaragi- Matsuchi 東京名所真景之内如月
by Kobayashi Kiyochika (1847-1915)

The artworks displayed on JAODB are not for sale.

Artist: Kobayashi Kiyochika (1847-1915) 小林清親
Title: February, a Snowy Evening at Matchiyama- Kisaragi- Matsuchi 東京名所真景之内如月
Series: Sights of Famous Places of Tokyo
Date of first edition?07/03/1896
Date of this artwork?1896 March (may not be accurate)
Publisher (first edition)?Inoue Kichijiro
Publisher (this edition)?Inoue Kichijiro
Medium (first edition): Woodblock
Medium (this edition): Woodblock
Format (first edition): Triptych
Format (this edition): Triptych
DB artwork code: 28801
Notes (first edition)?
Notes (this edition)?
The following information was taken from the original web listing of this artwork. Note that there may be some inaccuracies:

Kiyochika Kobayashi (1847-1915)
View of Famous Places in Tokyo : February, a Snowy Evening at Matchiyama


作者:小林清親(弘化4~大正4)
画題:東京名所真景之内如月
版元:井上吉次郎
年代等:明治29年3月7日印刷、同10日発行
体裁:大判錦絵三枚続
(右)37.2×25.0cm (中)37.2×25.0cm (左)37.2×25.0cm
署名:清親、(朱)清親

Artist Bio: 
Kobayashi Kiyochika (小林 清親, September 10, 1847 – November 28, 1915) was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist of the Meiji period.


Kiyochika is best known for his prints of scenes around Tokyo which reflect the transformations of modernity. He has been described as 'the last important ukiyo-e master and the first noteworthy print artist of modern Japan... [or, perhaps] an anachronistic survival from an earlier age, a minor hero whose best efforts to adapt ukiyo-e to the new world of Meiji Japan were not quite enough'.

The son of a government official, Kiyochika was heavily influenced by Western art, which he studied under Charles Wirgman. He also based a lot of his work on Western etchings, lithographs, and photographs which became widely available in Japan in the Meiji period. Kiyochika also studied Japanese art under the great artists Kawanabe Kyōsai and Shibata Zeshin.

His woodblock prints stand apart from those of the earlier Edo period, incorporating not only Western styles but also Western subjects, as he depicted the introduction of such things as horse-drawn carriages, clock towers, and railroads to Tokyo. These show considerable influence from the landscapes of Hokusai and the work of Utagawa Kuniyoshi, but the Western influence is also unquestionable; these are much darker images on the whole, and share many features with Western lithographs and etchings of the time.

These were produced primarily from 1876 to 1881; Kiyochika would continue to publish ukiyo-e prints for the rest of his life, but also worked extensively in illustrations and sketches for newspapers, magazines, and books. He also produced a number of prints depicting scenes from the Sino-Japanese War and Russo-Japanese War, collaborating with caption writer Koppi Dojin, penname of Nishimori Takeki (1861-1913), to contribute a number of illustrations to the propaganda series Nihon banzai hyakusen hyakushō ('Long live Japan: 100 victories, 100 laughs'). (from Wiki)
版画家。東京生。江戸本所御蔵屋敷の子。幼名は勝之助。画を志し、ワーグマン・河鍋暁斎・柴田是真に師事、浮世絵師として出発する。光線と影を取り入れた新様式の洋風版画は「光線画」の名で人気を博し、両国大火後は「清親ポンチ」と呼ばれる風刺画を『団団珍聞』などに描く。錦絵の衰退により肉筆画に移行した。大正4年(1915)歿、69才。

The artworks displayed on JAODB are not for sale.

JAODBContact MeJapanese Artwork for SaleMy Personal Collection of Japanese ArtResearch ArticlesKoitsu.com


Site copyright: Dr Ross F. Walker. Copyright of the displayed artwork: the original owner. The information contained on this website is provided as an educational resource to scholars and collectors of Japanese art. JAODB would like to thank the caretakers of these art items for their contribution to this database. The items displayed here are not being offered for sale. Unless otherwise indicated the displayed item is not in the ownership of JAODB or Ross Walker.