Fine Japanese Prints

Fine Japanese Prints

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 116. Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797-1861) |  Mitsukuni defying the skeleton spectre conjured up by Princess Takiyasha (Souma no furudairi yokai ga shadokuro to tatakau oya notarou Mitsukuni) | Edo period, 19th century.

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797-1861) | Mitsukuni defying the skeleton spectre conjured up by Princess Takiyasha (Souma no furudairi yokai ga shadokuro to tatakau oya notarou Mitsukuni) | Edo period, 19th century

Lot Closed

December 14, 02:55 PM GMT

Estimate

30,000 - 40,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797-1861)

Mitsukuni defying the skeleton spectre conjured up by Princess Takiyasha (Souma no furudairi yokai ga shadokuro to tatakau oya notarou Mitsukuni)

Edo period, 19th century 


woodblock print, each sheet signed Ichiyusai Kuniyoshi ga, the right sheet sealed Yoshikiri, publisher's mark Hachi, censor's seal Watari (Watanabe Jiemon), circa 1845-46


Vertical oban triptych: 

Left sheet: 37.3 x 25 cm., 14¾ x 9⅞ in. 

Centre sheet: 37.4 x 25.3 cm., 4¾ x 10 in. 

Right sheet: 37 x 25 cm., 14⅝ x 9⅞ in. 

This fearsome apparition has been conjured by the Princess Takiyasha, the surviving daughter of Taira no Masakado (?–940), who spies onto the scene from the left as she reads from a scroll of spells. She calls up a monstrous skeleton to frighten the warrior hero Oya Taro Mitsukuni, who was sent by his lord Minamoto no Yorinobu (968–1048) to destroy her witchcraft.


The giant skeleton looms out of the blackness to menace Mitsukuni below by pulling back tattered reed blinds with its fingers.


This tale is dealt with the book (yomihonTales of Faithful Uto Yasukata (Uto Yasukata chugi den) (1806) by Santo Kyōden (1761–1816). While the scene in Kyoden’s novel features several hundred skeletons, which are divided into two armies and fight a battle, Kuniyoshi replaces these with a monumental depiction of a single giant skeleton sensationally spreading the three sheets of a triptych.


It seems to be one of the earliest states, which is evidenced by a black pigment of granular character that appears on the skeleton’s chin and ribs in the centre of the chest and the grey colour of the eye sockets. In later printings, the band of wiped black disappears from the top of the composition and the eye sockets are of a blue tone.


The same print triptych is in numerous museum collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, accession no. 11.30468-70, The British Museum, museum no. 1908,0418,0.2.1-3, and the Honolulu Museum of Art, object no. 11641.06.


For another example of an early state of this triptych sold in these rooms, see Sotheby's, London, Fine Japanese Art, 5 November 2019, Lot 23: 

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2019/fine-japanese-art/utagawa-kuniyoshi-1797-1861-edo-period-19th