Yoshitora Utagawa, The Night Attack at Kumasaka, Mino Province

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JG0421YA04
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Artist: Yoshitora Utagawa (a.c.1830-1880)
Title: The Night Attack at Kumasaka, Mino Province
Publisher: Kiya Sojiro
Date: 1860
Size: (R)24.6 x35.8 (C)24.5 x 35.9 (L)24.6 x 35.8 cm

Original Japanese woodblock print.

yoshitora utagawa, The Night Attack at Kumasaka, Mino Province, ushiwakamaru, minamoto no yoshitsune
yoshitora utagawa, The Night Attack at Kumasaka, Mino Province, ushiwakamaru, minamoto no yoshitsune yoshitora utagawa, The Night Attack at Kumasaka, Mino Province, ushiwakamaru, minamoto no yoshitsune

Many fictional episodes exist in the life of the popular tragic hero Minamoto no Yoshitsune (1159–1189). Known as Ushiwakamaru in his youth, he left Kurama Temple outside of Kyoto, where he was supposed to train for the priesthood. He eventually joined the armed caravan of a wealthy gold merchant, Kinbai Kichiji, who was traveling to Mutsu in northern Japan. When the notorious bandit Kumasaka Chhan planned to rob Kichiji with his large band of outlaws, they took by storm the inn where the merchant’s men had stopped for the night. However, owing to the swordsmanship skills of Ushiwakamaru, the attackers were defeated. In this dynamic triptych, one of the attackers holds a lantern that illuminates Ushiwakamaru and Kumasaka in the middle of a ferocious fight.

Yoshitora Utagawa


Yoshitora Utagawa was a woodblock print artist active towards the end of the 19th century in Japan. Born in Edo (today’s Tokyo), neither his date of birth nor date of death is known. Yoshitora was a pupil of Kuniyoshi Utagawa (1798-1861), however, he was expelled due to artistic differences. He went on his own path and changed his artist name to Mosai, producing prints of warriors, kabuki actors, beautiful women, and foreigners in particular (Yokohama-e).

The limited contact with the West imposed by the Japanese regime in the Edo period (1603-1868) created endless curiosity that artists were eager to satisfy, although the situations they imagined were sometimes far from being accurate. It is evident from these prints that the Japanese were fascinated by the clothing, the strange habits and the occupations of the foreigners.

For much of the Edo period Japan adopted a sakoku (closed country) policy. Sakoku was a system in which strict regulations were placed on commerce and foreign relations by the shogunate and certain feudal domains. Trade was limited, except for the port of Nagasaki where the Dutch and Chinese were the only ones allowed to operate. In 1859 the port of Yokohama was opened to foreigners, and ukiyo-e artists, primarily of the Utagawa school, produced hundreds of woodblock print designs in response to a general curiosity about the newly arrived visitors.

Yoshitora was a leading designer of these prints and he also produced a number of landscapes derived from Western engraving. In the Meiji period that began in 1868 he also worked for newly established newspapers.

More Information
Print FormatTriptych
ArtistYoshitora Utagawa
SubjectSamurai & Male
Dimensions(R)24.6 x35.8 (C)24.5 x 35.9 (L)24.6 x 35.8 cm
Condition ReportTrimmed, covered wormholes, light soiling on the edges, black ink stains.
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