Private Collection of Fine Japanese Prints

Private Collection of Fine Japanese Prints

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 3. TOSHUSAI SHARAKU (ACTIVE 1794-95) OTANI TOKUJI AS THE SERVANT SODESUKE  | EDO PERIOD, 18TH CENTURY.

TOSHUSAI SHARAKU (ACTIVE 1794-95) OTANI TOKUJI AS THE SERVANT SODESUKE | EDO PERIOD, 18TH CENTURY

Lot Closed

October 8, 01:03 PM GMT

Estimate

50,000 - 70,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

TOSHUSAI SHARAKU (ACTIVE 1794-95) OTANI TOKUJI AS THE SERVANT SODESUKE 

EDO PERIOD, 18TH CENTURY


woodblock print, artist's signature faded (signed Tôshûsai Sharaku ga), publisher's mark for Tsuta-Juzaburo Koshodo faded, circa 1794-95

Oban

35.7 x 24.1 cm, 14⅛ x 9½ in.


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Only twenty-eight published prints are known to have survived from what has been dubbed the "first period" of Sharaku's nine-month long career. These prints provide an intimate and close-up up view of an actor portraying a character in a Kabuki play, and great emphasis has been placed on Sharaku’s ability to have rendered not only the depiction of fictional Kabuki characters, but also a more in-depth and emotional interpretation of the actors themselves. Here Sharaku portayed the comedian Tokuji, portraying Sodesuke, servant to the Ishii brothers, in the play Hana-Ayame Bunroku Soga, a tale of honour and retribution. Sodesuke, loyal to his masters, determinedly draws his tanto from its scabbard, poised to act on the brothers’ behalf in their quest to revenge their father's murder. Tokuji’s clenched fist and tense pose reveal his fervent and energetic approach to acting. In order to ensure that his subjects were in the spotlight, Sharaku placed them against a dark monochrome and mica-sprinkled background, their own virtual and two-dimensional stage.


For further impressions in museum collections see the British Museum, accession no.1909,0618,0.34 and the Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard Art Museums, accession no. 1916.507