Toyohiro
Utagawa Toyohiro (歌川豊広, 歌川豐廣), birth name Okajima Tōjiro (1773–1828), was a Japanese ukiyo-e artist and painter. He was a member of the Utagawa school and studied under Utagawa Toyoharu, the school's founder. His works include a number of ukiyo-e landscape series, as well as many depictions of the daily activities in the Yoshiwara entertainment quarter; many of his stylistic features paved the way for Hokusai and Hiroshige (the latter a prodigy who studied under Toyohiro, becoming one of the very finest of all landscape artists), as well as producing an important series of ukiyo-e triptychs in collaboration with Toyokuni, and numerous book and e-hon illustrations, which occupied him in his later years.
The ukiyo-e series he produced include the following:
- Eight Views of Edo (several series)
- Eight Views of Ōmi (several series)
- Newly Published Perspective Pieces (Shinpan uki-e)
- Twelve Months by Two Artists, Toyokuni and Toyohiro (Toyokuni Toyohiro ryōga jūnikō), with Toyokuni
- Untitled series of A Day in the Life of a Geisha
- Untitled series of Eight Views of Edo in the Snow
- The Six Great Poets
- The Twelve Hours
- The Four Accomplishments
- The Three Cities
Gallery
[edit]-
Cock, 1804
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Flower Arrangement of Narcissus in a Flat Green Dish
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Woman Putting on Finger Plectrums to Play the Koto, hanging scroll (detail)
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Print of Mt. Fuji, 1800
References
[edit]- Hillier, Jack Ronald. 1970. Catalogue of the Japanese paintings and prints in the Collection of Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Gale, Vol. 1, p. 346. Taylor & Francis, Dec 31, 1970.
- Wendy shore,Woodbine Books 1980, Ukiyo-e published by Castle Books for Library of fine Arts p. 26