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Notes (1st edition)
Publisher (this edition): Doi Doi Doi
Date of this item: 1936 1936 1936
Notes (this edition)
These notes were written by the original owner/seller/auctioner of the item and may be inaccurate.:
Thursday, 22 February 2007

ARTIST: Nouet, Noel (1885-1944)
SERIES: Publisher Doi
TITLE or SUBJECT: Ten Views of Tokyo, AKASAKA MITSUKE
SIGNATURE or SEAL: Signature
DATE or CIRCA: 1936
PAPER SIZE: 15 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
IMPRESSION/COLOR/CONDITION: Good/Good/Good
CONDITION DETAILS: Good state
Wednesday, 10 May 2006

NOËL NOUËT
(FRENCH ACTIVE 1930S & 1940S)
ASAKUSA MITSUKE
Signed Noël Nouët; Doi, publisher; Yokoi, printer; Ikeda, carver. With Do watermark. Color woodcut.
15 1/2 x 10 3/16 in.
Unframed



Condition Report


Condition: 39.3 x 25.9 cm.
- Sheet with margins.
- Sheet with light staining.
- Some stains and soiling in the margins recto; stain located within the image above artist signature.
- Scattered handling creases.
- Small spots of f
Monday, 16 January 2006

NOEL NOUET
Akasaka
Date: 1936, dated in the blocks to the print, this is a later edition published by Doi with the rare Endo-Ito carver/printer seals
Size: approx. 10.4" x 15.75"
Condition: Fine, no condition issues
Impression: Fine, Nouet prints are notorious for their carving as the artist's style used many lines and required much more time to be carved than other shin hanga artist's prints.
Color: Fine, deep saturated color and bleed through

DURING THE EDO PERIOD, Asakusa was a halfway stop between the city and its most infamous pleasure district, Yoshiwara. In time, however Asakusa developed into a pleasure quarter in its own right, eventually becoming the center for that most loved of Edo entertainments, kabuki. In the very shadow of Senso-ji Temple a fairground spirit prevailed and a whole range of very secular entertainments were provided, from kabuki theatres to brothels. When Japan ended its self-imposed isolation with the commencement o the Meiji Restoration, it was in Asakusa that the first cinemas opened, in Asakusa that the first music halls appeared and in Asakusa's Teikoku Gekijo Theatre (Imperial Theatre) that western opera was first performed before Japanese audiences. Unfortunately, Asakusa never quite recovered from the bombing at the end of WWII. Although Senso-ji Temple was rebuilt, other areas of Tokyo assumed Asakusa's role of the pleasure district.
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