Eisen Keisai, Meizan from Chojiya Tea House, Edo Beauty

£1500
SKU
JG011874
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Artist: Eisen Keisai (1790-1848)
Title: Meizan from Chojiya Tea House
Series title: Keijo Dochu Sugoroku
Publisher: Tsutaya Kichizo
Date: 1821-1825
Size: 38.8 x 25.7 cm

Original Japanese woodblock print.

eisen keisai, courtesan, Meizan from Chojiya Tea House, kimono fashion, hawk and pine, beauty
eisen keisai, courtesan, Meizan from Chojiya Tea House, kimono fashion, hawk and pine, beauty eisen keisai, courtesan, Meizan from Chojiya Tea House, kimono fashion, hawk and pine, beauty

Keisai Eisen was an artist, who alongside Kunisada I (Toyokuni III), was renowned for his beauty prints, depicting courtesans and geisha in everyday life, sometimes touching on the erotic in nature. His best works, including his okubi-e ('large head pictures'), are considered to be masterpieces of the Bunsei Era (1818–1830).

This print captures a courtesan from Chojiya Tea House. She wears a richly decorated kimono, with highly auspicious symbols on the back in the form of a hawk and pine tree. Courtesans of Edo period Japan were not only skilled in serving a male customer, but they were also experts in dance, music, conversation, and other kinds of entertainment. They operated within the licensed quarters, such as the Yoshiwara district. They had a complex system of ranks, etiquette, and procedures. Courtesan would earn her funds not only for herself, but also for her entire entourage, e.g. attendants, younger courtesans-in-training.

Eisen Keisai


Keisai Eisen was an artist, who alongside his contemporary Kunisada I (Toyokuni III), was renowned for his beauty prints, depicting courtesans and geisha in everyday life, sometimes touching on the erotic in nature. Despite his devotion to the genre he also produced noteworthy landscape prints such as the ‘Eight Views of Edo’ (‘Edo Hakkei’) series, occasionally collaborating with Hiroshige I. Eisen is also known for his development of aizuri-e, which is a term that describes ukiyo-e that is printed only in shades of blue. This technique was popular in the 1830s and 1840s and has been employed by various artists, including Hokusai. He began an apprenticeship in art early on in life, studying with the Kano painter Hakkeisai. He later was looked after by Kikugawa Eiji and became known as a pupil of Eiji’s son, Kikugawa Eizan, who was his contemporary, through curious circumstances. The feudal lord of the Hishu province wanted to own all prints produced by Kikugawa Eizan’s students and received a collection of them, in which Keisai Eisen’s prints were included. Thereafter, Eisen was then considered to be Eizan’s student, too.

More Information
Print FormatOban (Vertical)
ArtistEisen Keisai
SubjectBeauty & Female, Kimono Design, Animal & Birds
Dimensions38.8 x 25.7 cm
Condition ReportLight wear and creases, soiling, small watermark on top right.
FoldersIn Store, DA
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