Ukiyo-e


Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, "Kato Ishidomaru"
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In this popular Japanese tale, the young boy Kato Ishidomaru sets out to find his father, who left him at a young age to become a priest named Kuraya Doshin. In this illustration from the story, Ishidomaru finds his father on Mount Koya (Wakayama Prefecture), but his father denies knowing him and tells him to go home. A sad tale of both religious and family devotion.
Yoshitoshi's "Twenty-Four Accomplishments in Imperial Japan" was a series of works produced between 1881-1887 depicting various notable leaders from Japan's long, storied history. The poems at the top of the compositions are by Ryutei Tanehiko. Tokaido Arts is pleased to present the full series of works from the second printing ca. 1893 following Yoshitoshi's death in 1892.
Series: Twenty-Four Accomplishments in Imperial Japan
Date: ca. 1881
Size: Oban
Publisher: Matsuki Heikichi
Condition: Original album backing; light toning, otherwise excellent color and condition
Frame Shown: 16" x 24” x 1/2”, Classic Walnut, Clear Walnut
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) was a master painter and woodblock print artist whose works have made an indelible mark on Japanese art and design to this day. His most famous series, "One Hundred Aspects of the Moon," comprise some of Yoshitoshi's best known designs.
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