| Kunisada
Utagawa, Japanese (1786 - 1865)
During his lifetime Kunisada Utagawa was considered to be the
best print designer by his contemporaries. He was more popular
than Hiroshige, Hokusai or Kuniyoshi.
Student of Toyokuni I
Kunisada was born near Edo (today Tokyo) as the son of an
affluent merchant with a ferry boat license. At the age of
fifteen he joined the famous art school of Utagawa Toyokuni
and took the name Kunisada.
Early Success
In 1807 the young artist produced his first illustrated book.
And in 1808 his first actor prints were published. His fame
grew fast. While other artists like Kuniyoshi or Hiroshige
had to fight for recognition for years, he was successful from
the beginning. He should become the most commercially successful
of all woodblock printmakers ever. His early success may not
have had a good influence on his personality. He had a reputation
for his conceited personality.
From Kunisada to Toyokuni
Kunisada designed
a wide spectrum of traditional ukiyo-e subjects like kabuki themes,
beautiful women, historical events and
quite a few shunga prints. He made few landscapes.
In 1825 Toyokuni I had died. Later in 1844 Kunisada decided
to take the name of his master and called himself Toyokuni.
He is now known as Toyokuni III. The name of Toyokuni II was
claimed by a lesser known and mediocre ukiyo-e artist, Toyoshige.
He was the son-in-law of Toyokuni I and became the head of
the Utagawa school after the death of his father-in-law. Toyoshige
is now referred as Toyokuni II. Kunisada was outraged when
Toyoshige was named head of the Utagawa school and not him.
The name changes of ukiyo-e artists can be annoying and confusing
for a newbie collector. The following list may help.
* 1807-1844: Gototei Kunisada
* 1833-1844: Kochoro Kunisada
* from 1844: Toyokuni (III)
* from 1845: Shozo
Many of the prints signed by Kunisada Utagawa bear the preceding
Gototei, Kochoro or Ichiyosai to his artist name Kunisada,
respectively Toyokuni after 1844. In 1844/45 the artist signed
many of his prints with "Kunisada changing to Toyokuni".
In 1845 he retired officially and called himself Shozo. But
that did not mean that he stopped printmaking.
Collaboration Works with Hiroshige and Kuniyoshi
Although there was some rivalry between Kunisada and Kuniyoshi,
the two men designed and published a series of prints together.
He also made some collaborative prints with Hiroshige I. In
1852 Kunisada designed the series Restaurants of Edo and in
1855 the series The Fifty-Three Stations from Two Brushes in
collaboration with Hiroshige.
Kunisada also had a flourishing ukiyo-e school. The best of
his students were Kunichika and Chikanobu who themselves became
famous artists of the Japanese woodblock printmaking tradition.
Collecting Kunisada Prints
The number of Kunisada prints is estimated at over 20,000
designs. His prints belong to those a collector will find on
the art market frequently. Prices range in the middle to lower
area starting as low as US$100. Art critics see Kunisada prints
with a laughing and a weeping eye. While some of his prints
are ranked among the best masterpieces of ukiyo-e, many of
his works are regarded as mediocre. The prices on the art market
reflect this view. And therefore some highly esteemed or unusual
and rare subjects can easily surpass the thousand dollar limit.
There are the usual speculations about the degree of involvement
of the master in producing these roughly 20,000 designs. Judging
from the fact that ukiyo-e was considered more a craft than
fine art, it can be assumed that many of the Kunisada prints
were created by his students with a loose supervision of the
master.
This was in no way different from European painting schools
of great masters. Durer or Rubens managed their workshops with
at least a dozen students who were actively involved in the
creation of an art work. And what is so wrong with it? The
idea that an art work is the result of a moment of divine intuition,
is an invention of the art understanding of the twentieth century
with its emphasis on creativity. The Japanese culture of the
Edo period considered ukiyo-e as an artcraft at the best.
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