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Totoribes Brave Fighting

Totoribes Brave Fighting
by Shotei Takahashi (1871-1945) Hiroaki

The artworks displayed on JAODB are not for sale.

Artist: Shotei Takahashi (1871-1945) Hiroaki 松亭高橋、弘明
Title: Totoribes Brave Fighting
Series: 
Date of first edition?1892
Publisher (first edition)?Nihon Rekishi Gaho 日本歴史畫譚
Publisher (this edition)?Nihon Rekishi Gaho 日本歴史畫譚
Medium (first edition): Machine Printing
Medium (this edition): Machine Printing
Format (first edition): Chuban
Format (this edition): Chuban
DB artwork code: 41032
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:

Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Takahashi Shotei
(Hiroaki)
1871-1945

' Totoribe's Brave Fighting '

The hero is in a bamboo thicket deflecting and catching arrows:
a very famous episode from Japanese History

A Genuine Japanese Woodcut Print
from the print edition:

Nihon Rekishi Gaho
(Japanese History)

May 30th 1892


Publisher:
Okura Shoten

Dyptych (2 pages)

Hiroaki was certainly one of the most important
Woodblock Print Artisits of the Late Meiiji Era.

Print signed with his seal (chop) in red ink in the block.

Over 100 years Old

On traditional Washi with clear bleed-through



Condition:
As per picture
(VG/Good)
(2 separate sheets, never mounted
slight soiling confined mainly to margin as shown)

Size approx.:
7.5 x 10 1/4 inches

Age (approx.):
Late Meiji
(Late 1800s)

Artist Bio: 
Takahashi Shotei was born in Tokyo with the given name of Takahashi Katsutaro. At a young age he was trained in Nihon-ga , the traditional Japanese painting style by his uncle Matsumoto Fuko, and beginning around 1907 Shotei started designing for the Watanabe Color Print Company. Shotei was among the first designers to be recruited into Watanabe's stable of artists, which would later expand to include Goyo, Shinsui, Hasui, Kasamatsu, Koson and Koitsu among others. Many Watanabe prints were designed for export, primarily to North America, where the demand for all things Japanese was high in the early 20th century.

By 1923 Shotei had produced nearly 500 designs for Watanabe, when Tokyo was hit by the Great Kanto earthquake -- the worst recorded natural catastrophe in the history of Japan. The fires ignited by the earthquake raged for three days, and Watanabe's print shop and all the woodblocks created by Shotei and the other early shin hanga artists, were destroyed.

After the earthquake Shotei created another 250 prints mostly depicting scenic Japanese landscapes in the shin hanga style he had helped to define. He continued to work for Watanabe, but also worked with the publishers Fusui Gabo and Shobido Tanaka, where he had more control over the finished print than was possible with Watanabe.

Shotei used a variety of names, signatures and seals during his lifetime. From 1907 until 1922 he used the name Shotei, and after 1922 Hiroaki and Komei.

The artworks displayed on JAODB are not for sale.

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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.