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TSUKIOKA YOSHITOSHI: THE GHOST OF TAIRA NO TOMOMORI APPEARING AT DAIMOTSU BAY
奥地利
06月13日 下午4点 开拍 / 06月11日 下午3点 截止委托
拍品描述
TSUKIOKA YOSHITOSHI: THE GHOST OF TAIRA NO TOMOMORI APPEARING AT DAIMOTSU BAYBy Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892), signed Yoshitoshi with seal TaisoJapan, dated 1889Color woodblock print on paper. Vertical oban. Signed Yoshitoshi with seal Taiso; publisher Sasaki Toyokichi. Title Daimotsu no ura ni rei Taira no Tomomori kaijo ni shutsugen no zu (The Ghost of Taira no Tomomori Appearing at Daimotsu Bay), from the series Shinken sanjuroku kaisen (Thirty-Six New Forms of Ghosts).The ghostly Taira no Tomomori stands atop the churning waves about to swamp the Minamoto's ships, staring defiantly ahead with a grim scowl. He grips a naginata in one hand, his golden yellow tunic fluttering in the wind.SIZE of the sheet 37.1 x 25.4 cmCondition: Good condition with minor wear and slight browning of paper. The colors slightly faded. The outer edge with some foxing.Taira no Tomomori spent most of his life campaigning against the Minamoto Clan. Following his defeat at the hands of the Minamoto at the naval Battle of Dan-no-Ura, Tomomori committed suicide by tying himself to an anchor and leaping into the sea. He returned as a ghost to haunt the Minamoto, raising an enormous gale that swept over the ships of the clan's fleet in Daimotsu Bay.Yoshitoshi's last woodblock series, Thirty-Six New Forms of Ghosts, draws on an array of supernatural tales from both China and Japan. The images depict the weird, wonderful, and sinister ghost stories that were widely told among the Japanese population. Interestingly, this series was produced at a time when the Meiji government actively discouraged anything that contradicted Western science and rationality, leading some critics to regard this series as a criticism of the government's new ideology.Ghost stories have long been a rich source of subject for kabuki plays and Noh, which in turn would inspire ukiyo-e artists in their print making. Several of the subjects for the Thirty-six Ghosts were taken directly from Noh, whereas many more of prints were based on stories from kabuki plays.Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) was one of the leading woodblock print artists during the Meiji era (1868-1912) and one of the last to work in the traditional ukiyo-e manner. Born in Edo (today’s Tokyo), he showed a strong interest in classical Japanese literature and history. When he was 11, he became a student at Kuniyoshi Utagawa’s studio. Under his teacher’s guidance, he showed exquisite draftsmanship skills and learned how to draw from life, something not necessarily part of the training schools of painting and illustration in Japan.

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拍品估价:500 - 1,000 欧元 起拍价格:500 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

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