Extra-ordinary Anatomy: The Human Figure in Japanese Prints
This installation focuses on the distinctive characteristics of the human figure as depicted in Japanese prints from the Edo and early Meiji periods (between 1700 and 1900): crooked backs, sloping necks, contorted feet, twisted heads, sinewy arms, and potbellies. Drawn only with contour lines, but rendered as if in three dimensions, the figures in these prints seem to present the antithesis of anatomical correctness according to Western academic standards. Instead, they demonstrate their artists’ own concepts of anatomy and strong understanding of space.
The history of the human body in Japan differs greatly from that in Europe and America. In Heian Japan, for instance, women blackened their teeth and shaved off their eyebrows. The practice of teeth blackening continued during the Edo period, when female courtesans also began putting wax into their hair to facilitate elaborate, stiff hairstyles. Men shaved the tops of their heads and wore the remainder in a bun; in the summertime, they would bare their skin, wearing only fundoshi, or loincloths. This history of style and conceptions of the body is reflected in the prints presented here. Four themes highlight this history: muscles, clothing, faces, and the relationship between the body and nature.
Musculature
This group emphasizes how printmakers depicted muscles. One could say that the muscles are over-rendered: the bamboo cutter has exceptionally wrinkled limbs and facial features. This manner of portrayal was common for old men, who in these prints have sagging bellies, crooked legs, and joints like those of marionettes. (x1965-41, x1983-96, x1983-35, x1983-56, x1983-90, x1983-104, 1997-548, x1983-97)
Facial Features
The subjects in this group have unusual facial expressions: bulging, crossed eyes, comically downturned mouths, and miniscule features that express anxiety, humor, intrigue, amusement, anger, and pleasure. In the print by Utamaro, Courtesan Passing a Letter, the two women have small eyes and even tinier mouths set in the expanse of their white, oval faces. In the print by Shunsho, Actor Dancing, the frizzy-haired, dancing actor bites his nails and has a cartoonish frown. (x1991-260, x1991-274, x1983-102, x1946-388, 2011-93, x1983-93)
The Body as Landscape
These prints blur the boundaries between landscape art and the art of the figure. In Hokusai’s print of Kaosho Rochishin, parts of the monk’s body adopt the forms of forest flora. The hair on his body resembles tufts of grass, while his robe extends out from him in a manner reminiscent of tree roots. In the large shun-ga (“spring” picture) print, titled Lovers, the robes become the surface for a landscape, including a bridge, a Shinto gate, and, to the far left, a priest or aristocrat. In Hokusai’s landscapes from the 100 Views of Fuji series, the figures blend into their settings. (x1940-8.2.10, x1940-8.2.24, 2011-59 a-b, x1940-8.2.25, x1983-109, x1940-8.2.12, 2009-35, 2000-258, x1940-8.2.19)
Kimonos Extending the Body
In Japanese prints, clothing often conceals and distorts proportions. Figures wear garments that make them appear larger than life. This is seen in the print of an actor by Shunkosai Hokushu. The outsized actor stands in the foreground, and a fabric hanging almost totally obscures the figures in the background. In some prints, female bodies, mostly hidden by their kimonos, take on extreme proportions: miniscule hands and feet and elongated necks peek out from column-like robes in a serpentine manner. (x1965-45, x1942-308, x1991-277, 2007-162, x1985-127, x1983-28 , 2011-39, 2013-5)
Veronica Nicholson, Class of 2016
-
Portrait of the Comic Narrator Hanaedabō Enba (花枝坊圓馬)Portrait of the Comic Narrator Hanaedabō Enba (花枝坊圓馬), 1840
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
ActorActor,
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景)One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景), 1834–35
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景)One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景), 1834–35
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
Arashi Rikan II as the Shogun Taro, Nakamura Karoku I as Takiyosa, and Ichikawa Sukejiro in an unidentified role in a scene from the Play Soma Tarō Hyōbundan performed at the Naka Theater in 11/1832Arashi Rikan II as the Shogun Taro, Nakamura Karoku I as Takiyosa, and Ichikawa Sukejiro in an unidentified role in a scene from the Play Soma Tarō Hyōbundan performed at the Naka Theater in 11/1832,
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景)One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景), 1834–35
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
Fox Catching a Woman (Kitsune no tsuri onna 狐の釣り女)Fox Catching a Woman (Kitsune no tsuri onna 狐の釣り女),
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景)One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景), 1834–35
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
Couple with Pillow and Padded Kimono (Kaimaki futon to makura ni danjo かいまきふとんと枕に男女), from an untitled erotic series (Shunga shirīzu 春画シリーズ)Couple with Pillow and Padded Kimono (Kaimaki futon to makura ni danjo かいまきふとんと枕に男女), from an untitled erotic series (Shunga shirīzu 春画シリーズ), 1710s
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
Priest Kaosho Rochishin [Lu Zhishen] (花和尚魯智深), from the series “Hokusai Manga” (1814)Priest Kaosho Rochishin [Lu Zhishen] (花和尚魯智深), from the series “Hokusai Manga” (1814), ca. 1848
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景)One Hundred Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku hyakkei 富嶽百景), 1834–35
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese -
Yoshiwara Station No. 15 (Yoshiwara shuku jūgo 吉原宿 十五), from the series “Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō” (Tōkaidō gojūsan tsugi no uchi 東海道五十三次之内)Yoshiwara Station No. 15 (Yoshiwara shuku jūgo 吉原宿 十五), from the series “Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō” (Tōkaidō gojūsan tsugi no uchi 東海道五十三次之内), 1830s
Edo period, 1603–1868
Japanese