Who Was Japanese Artist Toyohara Chikanobu?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 12

  • @PaulpresentsART
    @PaulpresentsART 7 месяцев назад +2

    Thank you for sharing this video on the life of Chikanobu. I didn't know he was a member of the samurai class but at the time of Meiji I suppose it wasn't as big a deal as in earlier eras, especially during Sharaku's time who was rumoured to be of the samurai class (maybe it was proven or disproven?) and therefore forbidden to partake of the pleasures and artistry of the floating world. It's also wonderful to see different genres from Chikanobu apart from the bijin-ga and Russo-Japanese war series. I enjoyed it.

    • @MieGallery
      @MieGallery  7 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Paul! it's always an adventure, as you know.

  • @Loyal-cat
    @Loyal-cat 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge of the lesser known artist.

    • @MieGallery
      @MieGallery  7 месяцев назад

      Thanks for your support!

  • @tinaj984
    @tinaj984 7 месяцев назад

    I love Kunisada...I have a few Kunisada in the woodblock print books.

  • @stephenjenkins117
    @stephenjenkins117 7 месяцев назад

    These "deep dives" are a delight. Thanks! I sometimes wish you lingered a bit longer over the images, perhaps just a few seconds. Otherwise I am pausing repeatedly as I say wow! But I would go back and pause anyway. As a scholar of Asian religions, I am impressed by how little religious content there is among the prints. Was there such content and, if not why so?

    • @MieGallery
      @MieGallery  7 месяцев назад

      Thanks Steve! I agree I tend to go a bit quick. I'm going to do more lingering and closeups in the future. There are actually many references to religion (in the prints), especially in the events depicted, the types of people, and the underlying stories. It's a topic I don't dig into unless it's overt. There are many series I know that focus on some aspect of some religion. Thanks for the suggestions.

  • @arielvalencia4583
    @arielvalencia4583 7 месяцев назад

    thanks for sharing..! a super nice video..! mm... there is an anecdote of him depicting the old meiji emperor as an skeleton dictating a new law it seems he was imprisoned for months hihi...dont remember if he was,- but is funny that print....is in wiki popsted... l iked always his work...! only have a few examples, until Chris introduced me to kunichika ...hihi...

    • @MieGallery
      @MieGallery  7 месяцев назад

      oh - I'd like to see that anecdote, let me know if you find it. There was very little about his personal life I could find.

  • @ShaunaMarieSings
    @ShaunaMarieSings Месяц назад

    Amazing information, thank you! I own one of his original prints, 'Tsunayoshi,' from the series, 'A Brief Account of the Tokugawa Lineage.'
    Description: 'Handsome scene from the life of the Tsunayoshi, the fifth Tokugawa shogun. A beauty waits at the garden gate as a young girl greets her with a lantern, gesturing towards the house where the Shogun Tsunayoshi is issuing the "Shorui Awaremi no Rei" or Edicts on Compassion for Living Things, which prevented dogs from being killed. This act earned him the title the "Dog Shogun." The beauty smiles slyly as she tilts her head, dressed in a blue kimono bordered with flowers and grasses. A large cherry tree blooms in the courtyard overlooking a lake, with stepping stones and a lantern on a pole.'

    • @MieGallery
      @MieGallery  Месяц назад +1

      That's great! he seems like a really nice person even though he didn't want to be Shogun, and so many interesting things happened during his reign.

    • @ShaunaMarieSings
      @ShaunaMarieSings Месяц назад

      @@MieGallery Yes...very interesting man!!