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Castle Fine Arts  -  Artists Biographies/

 

Yoshitoshi, Tsukioka (1839-1892)

The most important woodblock print artist of the Meiji period, Yoshitoshi was born in Edo (Tokyo) in 1839 with the given name of Yonejiro. The son of a merchant, samurai, Yoshitoshi left home permanently to live with his uncle, Tsukioka Sessai in Shinbashi. In 1850 his uncle enrolled him as a resident student in the school of Kuniyoshi (1798 -1861). He was given the artist name Yoshitoshi. His first print was published when he was 14, a triptych of a historical 12th C. naval battle. In the 1860, after the death of Kuniyoshi, Yoshitoshi supported himself by designing prints of the famous Kabuki actors of the day. By the mid-1860's his prints depicted historical and heroic subjects. Against the difficult political background that was Edo between 1866-1868, Yoshitoshi produced a number of prints with intense, bloody subjects. In the years 1868 and 1869, a total of 240 designs were published and a newspaper ranked him as the fourth most popular woodblock print artist. He produced few prints between 1869 - 1871 and suffering a deep depression and nervous breakdown. During the 1870's he designed prints for a Tokyo newspaper and struggled financially. The Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 led to his being commissioned to design a number of triptychs of the events. These were well received by the public and helped him temporarily escape his financial difficulties. Completed in 1880, Yoshitoshi's series, "Mirror of Famous Generals of Japan", caused a sensation with their daring compositions, strong lines and vivid colors.

Due to his success, other artists began to copy his style. His life began to stabilize in the spring of 1880 when he moved to a larger house in Nezu, met and married the former Geisha, Sakamaki Taiko, who had two small children. Yoshitoshi continued to teach, having six to seven full-time students and a number of day students as well. While the atmosphere of his studio was friendly and informal, the master was a volatile and moody man who would harshly criticize older students.

Between 1882 and 1886 he worked for three different newspapers. In 1883 the publisher Akiyama Buemon commissioned Yoshitoshi to develop his painting of Fujiwara no Yasuwase playing the flute into a triptych design. The print, published in 1883 is considered Yoshitoshi's masterpiece. Buemon would later publish the "One Hundred Aspects of the Moon" series, beginning in 1885 and continuing over the next six years. Also in the 1880's Yoshitoshi produced designs for 120 illustrated books, and after Kyosai, became the most influential book illustrator of the Meiji period. His most sensitive portrayal of women was depicted in "Thirty-Two Aspects of Costumes and Manners" published in 1888, in which he recalled the traditions of the past. In 1888, during the time he was moving to a new home in Nihonbashi, he was robbed, loosing many paintings, drawings and two thousand Yen, a very large sum at the time. This shock may have led to the artist's renewed mental instability two years later. In 1889 he began working on the series, "Thirty-Six Ghosts" but was sick much of the time. Even with his poor health and failing eyesight, Yoshitoshi designed a group of superb triptychs which displayed his confidence and control of the medium. By 1891 he began to loose control of his mind and was admitted to several mental hospitals. Discharged from the hospital in May 1892, he moved to a rented lodging in Honjo where he remained until his death three weeks later from a cerebral hemorrhage.

Works of Yoshitoshi: Japanese Fine Art Woodblock Prints

  • Yoshitoshi's One Hundred Aspects of the Moon
  • Yoshitoshi's Thirty Six Ghosts
  • Yoshitoshi's Thirty Two Aspects of Women
  • Yoshitoshi's Finest Warriors
  • Yoshitoshi's Famous Generals of Japan
  • Yoshitoshi's Tales Eastern Brocade
  • Yoshitoshi's One Hundred Warriors

Other searches

  • Yoshitoshi Fujiwara plays flute by moonlight
  • Yoshitoshi Warrior Prints
  • Yoshitoshi Horror Prints
  • Yoshitoshi Ghosts Prints
  • Yoshitoshi Triptych Prints


 

 1   Total records found: 10

 
Picture of the Lonely House on Adachi Moor
 
A Poem by Takao
 
The Gion District
(Sold)
 
An Iron Cauldron & the Moon at Night
 
Faith in the Third-day Moon
 
Cassia Tree Moon
 
Mt. Otowa Moon
 
Moon at Shibaimachi (Theater district)
 
Huai River Moon
 
Moon of Kintoki's Mountain
 

 1  

Artist Bio Index:


18th & 19th
C. Artists:

Hiroshige
Chikanobu
Eisen
Eizan
Gakutei
Hirosada

Hiroshige II
Hokusai
Kunichika
Kunisada

Kuniyoshi
Kyosai (Gyosai)
Shunsho
Toyokuni I

Toyokuni III
Yoshitoshi


20th C. Artists:

Bertha Lum
Charles Bartlett
Chiura Obata
Clifton Karhu
Cyrus Leroy Baldridge
Elizabeth Keith
Hajime Namiki
Haku Maki
Hashiguchi Goyo
Helen Hyde
Hiroshi Yoshida
Ito Shinsui
Joichi Hoshi
Katsunori Hamanishi
Kawase Hasui
Kawase Hasui   (Posthumous)
Kiyoshi Saito
Koshiro Onchi
Ohara Shoson
  (Koson)
Paul Jacoulet
Ryohei Tanaka
Sadao Watanabe

Shigeki Kuroda
Shinichi Nakazawa
Shiro Kasamatsu
Yamamoto Shoun
Sugiura
Tadashi Nakayama
Takahashi Hiroaki   (Shotei)
Toko Shinoda
Tomoo Inagaki
Toraji Ishikawa

Torii Kotondo
Toshi Yoshida

Tsuchiya Koitsu
Tsuruya Kokei
Umetaro Azechi
Unichi Hiratsuka
Yoshitoshi Mori
Yuji Hiratsuka


China Trade:

Auguste Borget
Chinese School
Edward Hildebrandt Thomas Allom
William Alexander


Modern Originals:

Carol Jessen      


Natural History:

J. James Audubon Mark Catesby John Gould

 


Antique Maps:

Conrad Lotter
Gilles Robert

Gerard de Jode
Henricus Hondius

Jan Huygen
John Tallis

Matthaeus Seutter
Nicolas Sanson




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