Sanjo Kantaro as a Young Woman Standing in a Wisteria Arbor
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Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
This rare, hand-colored print incorporates a technique called urushi-e, literally "lacquer picture," in which the artist paints deer glue over areas of black pigment, producing a lustrous effect reminiscent of lacquer. Metal filings were sometimes sprinkled onto the pigment for decorative effect. Kiyonobu’s prints are characteristically hand-colored and outlined in black. Inspired by a family tradition of painters of Kabuki posters, Kiyonobu created prints mainly of actors and scenes from plays.
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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:
Torii Kiyonobu I (Japanese, 1664–1729), Sanjo Kantaro as a Young Woman Standing in a Wisteria Arbor, c. early or mid 1730s, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.
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