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A Votive Picture to Be Donated to the Kannon of Asakusa (Asakusa Kannon hō kakegaku no zu), by Takigawa of the Ōgiya, Kamuro Menami and Onami, with Tomikawa, Kumegawa, Tamagawa, Tsugawa, Utagawa, and Kiyokawa

Nombre del creador

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Tsukimaro

Contexto cultural

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Japanese

Fecha

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Creación: 19th century, Edo period

Acerca de la obra

Curationist LogoDescripción de objeto de Curationist

Oiran, high-ranking Japanese courtesans, were often renowned artists as well as stylish beauties. In the 1790s and early 1800s Takigawa, of the Ōgiwa brothel in Edo (now Tokyo), was both artist and beauty. Several portraits celebrating Takigawa exist today. This woodblock print of Takigawa directing a group of other courtesans and young assistants showcases the oiran as an artist and temple patron. She and her assistants are painting an image to be offered to the temple of Kannon, a Buddhist bodhisattva, at Asakusa in what is now Tokyo. Votive offerings like this painting were a way for courtesans, like other members of society, to gain favor with the gods or bodhisattvas and to advertise their own largesse. Learn more about courtesans and spirituality in Edo art.

Descripción de objeto de Metropolitan Museum of Art
Woodblock print

Detalles de la obra de arte

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About Curationist

A Votive Picture to Be Donated to the Kannon of Asakusa (Asakusa Kannon hō kakegaku no zu), by Takigawa of the Ōgiya, Kamuro Menami and Onami, with Tomikawa, Kumegawa, Tamagawa, Tsugawa, Utagawa, and Kiyokawa

Creador

Kitagawa Kikumaro, Japanese, died 1830, Artist

Tipo de obra

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Work on paper; Triptych
Prints

Contexto cultural

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Japanese
Japan

Material

Triptych of woodblock prints; ink and color on paper

Dimensiones

Overall: H. 14 3/4 in. (37.5 cm); W. 23 3/4 in. (60. 3 cm);
height: 37.5centimetre;
width: 60.3centimetre

Técnica

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Idioma

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Japanese

Fecha

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Creación: 19th century, Edo period
ca. 1800

Procedencia

Rogers Fund, 1914

Estilo Período

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Ukiyo-e
Edo period (1615–1868)

Derechos

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Public Domain
Public Domain

Inscripción

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Ubicación

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Creación: Japan

Temas

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Tema descriptivo: Sex worker, Calligraphy, Poetry, Art of painting, Paintbrush, Kimono, Flower, Hand fan, Ema, Nihongami, Comb (accessory), Writing implement, Brothel, Artist, Woman, Oiran, People, Japanese people
Painting; Women; Artists

Tema

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Colaboradores de Curationist

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Reina Gattuso; Amanda Acosta; Jessica Gengler

Todas las obras de los archivos de Curationist pueden usarse y reproducirse libremente. Cómo asignar esta obra:

Tsukimaro, A Votive Picture to Be Donated to the Kannon of Asakusa (Asakusa Kannon hō kakegaku no zu), by Takigawa of the Ōgiya, Kamuro Menami and Onami, with Tomikawa, Kumegawa, Tamagawa, Tsugawa, Utagawa, and Kiyokawa, circa 1800. Metropolitan Museum of Art. The famous courtesan and artist Takigawa, of the Ōgiya brothel in Edo (now Tokyo), directs a group of courtesans and assistants as she paints a votive offering for the Kannon Bodhisattva at the Asakusa temple. Public Domain.

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