HI KANGEN SANSUI GASHIKI 3 vols - Rare Book Insider
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SUZUKI Fuyou

HI KANGEN SANSUI GASHIKI 3 vols

1789
  • $1,200
SUZUKI Fuyou. HI KANGEN SANSUI GASHIKI 3 vols. Oohon, 25.3 x 17.5 cm. Edo, Oosaka and Kyouto. Originally printed by Suharaya Mouhei in Edo in 1789. This is most probably an early reprint. There is no colophon but a notice of the 6 bookshops that were selling the book in alll three major cities, including Suharaya Mouhei. Grey blue string bound covers, fukuro-toji with the original title slips. See Mitchell 295 for his recorded example. An interesting artist's guide to Chinese style painting by one of its most popular Japanese advocates at the time. Printed quite well in sumi ink throughout. Trees, architecture, landscape. a uide to the basic brush techniques to be employed in traditional "Nanga". The genre of these sample books is a large one. Artists from Fuyo, as here, to Ike no Taiga, even Hokusai had a try now and again. They all had students and were quite confident of being able to teach the basics of brushwork through image and exortation. A nice set.
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KINSEI KIJIN-DEN

KINSEI KIJIN-DEN

[EHON] Mikuma Katen, artist [EHON] Mikuma Katen, artist. KINSEI KIJIN-DEN, 5 vols. Kyoto, Hishiya Magobei, et al. Kansei 2 [1790]. String-bound Japanese-style fukuro toji, in textured blue-grey covers with printed paper title labels. 37 single page and 2 double page b+w woodcuts, largely depicting the subject matter of the title: TALES OF ECCENTRICS FROM RECENT YEARS. Originally printed, as here, in 1790, this is a deservedly famous and oft-reprinted work in Japan. This is probably a relatively early reprint. It has Wonderful thin paper. The KIJIN_DEN catalogues the eccentricities and eccentrics of the late 18th Century - a time of florescence of the "bunjin" literati ideal in Japan. The bunjin created an esthetically pure environment in the midst of the bustle (and corruption) of everyday life. The initial exemplars were those scholars and artists who withdrew from public life in China after the fall of the Ming Dynasty to the alien Manchus in the mid-17th Century. The KIJIN-DEN represents one of the efforts by the Japanese to domesticate a Chinese cultural import and find native representatives of the literati ideal. It should be noted that this guide came out just as the Kansei Reforms, with a decidedly Confucian, if not authoritarian, bent, had just been promulgated. The "kijin" or literatus might well chafe under such a "reform" agenda. This book even well be seen as a bit of cultural protest on behalf of the individual ideal. The KIJIN-DEN is interesting for its exploration of the art world in Japan- for example, there is a domestic scene of the painters Ikeno Taiga and wife Gyokuran, among others. (Unfortunately, it is the only torn woodcut with part of the image missing) Indeed, there are many women depicted in the KIJIN-DEN. (See JAPANESE WOMEN ARTISTS 1600-1900) Also see Ryerson 416, Mitchell 364, Hillier/Ravicz 22. The condition is good over all, the printings are fair to good. There was a second series done some few years later, but this first series is complete as issued in 5 volumes.
  • $975