[Go Back]  [New Search]    Comparing Artwork Details for Utamaro 1 Kitagawa (1753-1806) "Moatside Prostitute"         

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Notes (1st edition)Date: Originally published by Ise-Mago, c.1794-95. Documentation: See page 94 of Volume 1, and page 146 of Volume 2, The Passionate Art of Kitagawa Utamaro, by Shugo Asano and Timothy Clark, Chiba City/London, 1995. Page 343 (#701) of Images From the Floating World, by Richard Lane, 1978, Dorsett 1982, among many others. This is one of Utamaro's most documented images. A prostitute from one of the small brothels known as Kashi-mise (moatside brothels), after their location in Yoshiwara next to the culvets on the east and west edges of the Quarter and in Fushimi-cho. The price for engaging one of these women could be 1 bu (one quarter of a gold ryo), but was more often 2 shu (half a bu, or 500-600 copper coins). There were even prostitutes who cost only half this figure. Here the woman is depicted using a toothpick, probably getting ready for her daytime stint in the brothel. The small bag of incense (kake-go or nioi-bukuro) hanging from her neck was used to disguise body odors. Signed Utamaro hitsu.
Publisher (this edition): Takamizawa Fusui Gabo
Date of this item: 1900s 1920s/30s
Notes (this edition)
These notes were written by the original owner/seller/auctioner of the item and may be inaccurate.:
KITAGAWA UTAMARO
Moatside Prostitute

Publisher: Takamizawa, seal on verso.

This is a very fine quality Showa era restrike of a classic Utamaro image, part of the series Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter.
Size: Oban. Overall: 11" x 16", Image: 10.25" x 15.25" (This print is just slightly larger than Utamaro's original.)
Condition: Fine, untrimmed.
Impression: Fine.
Color: Fine with good bleed through. Dark yellow ground.
Monday, 19 November 2007

KITAGAWA UTAMARO
Moatside Prostitute
from the series "Five Shades of Ink in the Northern Quarter"

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Date: originated c. 1795, this is a deluxe 1920s edition published by Fusui Gabo
Size: oban, approx. 10.5" x 15.5"
Condition: VG, with minor flaws
Impression: Fine, white mica background on tanned paper, nice impression, stong keylines
Color: Fine, good strong color with bleed through to the verso
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ABOUT FUSUI GABO COMPANY
Fusui Gabo was a publishing house active during the 1930's in Tokyo owned by Fusui Shobo. Fusui Gabo was renowned for the high quality of their prints, and their specialty was reproducing prints by famous ukiyo-e masters, the publisher also worked with shin hanga artists, including Takahashi Shotei (Hiroaki) on bijin-ga and landscape prints.
The publisher's seal is found stamped in the side margin of the print above the printer carver seals and reads "Copyright owned by Fusui Gabo Company" (Hanyen shoyu Fusui Gabo hakko). Most of the prints published by Fusui Gabo are not dated. Fusui Gabo was not active after World War II and it is presumed that the company disbanded during the war.
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