
![]() SVJP-0298.2019: Ichikawa Ebizō V as Sano Jirōzaemon. |
![]() SVJP-0297.2019: Iwai Kumesaburō III as Manjiya Yatsuhashi |


![]() SVJP-0298.2019: Ichikawa Ebizō V as Sano Jirōzaemon. |
![]() SVJP-0297.2019: Iwai Kumesaburō III as Manjiya Yatsuhashi |
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![]() SVJP-0298.2019: Ichikawa Ebizō V as Sano Jirōzaemon. |
![]() SVJP-0297.2019: Iwai Kumesaburō III as Manjiya Yatsuhashi |
Signed: Ichiyosai Kuniyoshi ga in a red cartouche and sealed with paulownia (kiri mon).
Date seal and double nanushi censor seals: Fuku & Muramatsu, 1853 (Kaei 6, 2nd month).
Size: Uchiwa-e (untrimmed fan print) 296 x 230 mm.
![]() SVJP-0303.2019 |
Toyokuni II
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Katsukawa Shun'ei. The Actor Ichikawa Monnosuke II in an Aragoto Role. LACME.
Actor Ichikawa Monnosuke II as Date no Yosaku Artist Tôshûsai Sharaku (Japanese, active 1794–1795), Publisher Tsutaya Jûzaburô (Kôshodô) (Japanese) 1794 (Kansei 6), 5th month. MFA.
Ippitsusai Bunchô. Actor Ichikawa Monnosuke II as Tsunewakamaru. Play: Iro Moyô Aoyagi Soga Theater: Nakamura. MFA.
Jacob Pins #972/p.341. Leiden, Rijksmuseum voor Volkenkunde.
"The Lovers Miura-ya Komurasaki and Shirai Gonpachi: Tragic love stories taken from real life and dramatized were a staple of stage and print; the darkly romantic combination of desire and death was hugely popular in the eighteenth century. Hirai Gompachi was a warrior of the Tottori fief in western Japan who fled to Edo after committing a murder. He was apprehended and sentenced to death in 1679. His distraught lover, the courtesan Komurasaki, committed suicide at his grave." [MET]
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http://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/45071