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Shigemasa (1739 - 1820)

Selected Chinese Poems in Seven Syllables (Toshisen ehon shichigon zekku) (2 volumes)

Medium: Ehon
Date: 1793
Size (H x W): 9 x 6.25 (inches)
Publisher: Kobayashi Shinbei (Suzanbo)
Signature: Kousuisai shujin
Condition: Soiling and wear on covers, title slip missing from one book and torn on other, some very soiling and small stain on margin of one illustration, binding and interior pages in good condition. The first book includes 5 pages of text and 16 double-page woodblock print illustrations, the second has 2 pages of text and 15 double-page illustrations.
$880.00

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Description

Two volumes from the ehon (illustrated book) series Selected Chinese Poems in Seven Syllables (Toshisen ehon shichigon zekku). The first book includes 5 pages of text and 16 double-page woodblock print illustrations, the second has 2 pages of text and 15 double illustrations.

About the artist

Shigemasa Kitao was a leading ukiyo-e artist active during the late 18th and early 19th century. Not only a print designer, he was an accomplished painter, calligrapher, illustrator and poet. He is most associated for illustrated books and his bijin-ga (pictures of beautiful women), though he also produced some portraits of kabuki actors. Shigemasa was an influential teacher in the legacy of ukiyo-e whose students include Masanobu Kitao, Masayoshi Kitao, and Shunman Kubo.

Born to a family of booksellers and publishers in Edo's Nihonbashi district, Shigemasa may have studied with Shigenaga Nishimura, but was largely self-taught. His earliest works take the form of benizuri-e, printed in two to three colors in the hosoban size. While the influence of Harunobu is clear in the Shigemasa's female figures, scholars suggest that Shigemasa imbues faces with greater expression and a hint of the realism. Shigemasa was a prolific illustrator. His oeuvre of illustrated books numbers well over 200, ranging from albums of kacho-e (bird-and-flower pictures) to shunga (erotic prints). Of particular note is the 1776 Mirror of Competing Beauties of the Green Houses, a collaborative project with Shunsho Katsukawa. The three-volume set shows the courtesans of the Yoshiwara not with customers, but on their own time, engaged in pastimes. Over the course of his career, Shigemasa used as many as fourteen different go (artist names), however, many of his prints are unsigned.