Sharaku
Template:Short description Template:For
Template:Nihongo was a Japanese ukiyo-e print designer, known for his portraits of kabuki actors. Neither his true name nor the dates of his birth or death are known. His active career as a woodblock artist spanned ten months; his prolific work met disapproval and his output came to an end as suddenly and mysteriously as it had begun. His work has come to be considered some of the greatest in the ukiyo-e genre.
Sharaku made mostly yakusha-e portraits of kabuki actors. His compositions emphasize poses of dynamism and energy, and display a realism unusual for prints of the time—contemporaries such as Utamaro represented their subjects with an idealized beauty, while Sharaku did not shy from showing unflattering details. This was not to the tastes of the public, and the enigmatic artist's production ceased in the first month of 1795. His mastery of the medium with no apparent apprenticeship has drawn much speculation, and researchers have long tried to discover his true identity—amongst the dozens of proposals, some suggest he was an obscure poet, others a Noh actor, or even the ukiyo-e master Hokusai.
Background
Ukiyo-e art flourished in Japan during the Edo period from the 17th to 19th centuries. The artform took as its primary subjects courtesans, kabuki actors, and others associated with the ukiyo "floating world" lifestyle of the pleasure districts. Alongside paintings, mass-produced woodblock prints were a major form of the genre.Template:Sfn Ukiyo-e art was aimed at the merchants at the bottom of the social scale, especially of the administrative capital of Edo (modern Tokyo). Its audience, themes, aesthetics, and mass-produced nature kept it from consideration as serious art.Template:Sfn
After the mid-18th century, full-colour Template:Transliteration prints became common, printed with a large number of woodblocks, one for each colour.Template:Sfn Critics have come to see the late 18th century as a peak period in the general quality of the work.Template:Sfn Shunshō of the Katsukawa school introduced the ōkubi-e "large-headed picture" in the 1760s.Template:Sfn He and other members of the Katsukawa school popularized ōkubi yakusha-e actor prints and the dusting of mica in the backgrounds to produce a luxurious glittering effect.Template:Sfn In contrast to earlier actor prints, which used stereotyped features and poses of anonymous actors, these ōkubi yakusha-e aimed for recognizable likenesses.Template:Sfn
TōshūsaiTemplate:Efn Sharaku's works appeared in the middle of the Kansei era (1789–1801), when the nation faced hard economic times that the military government responded to with reactionary policies such as the Kansei Reforms intended to strengthen the feudalistic shogunal system. Some of the policies restricted extravagant fashions, and Kabuki theatres faced strict control over their perceived excesses and limits on actors' incomes. Late Edo-period art nevertheless flourished, and new works and popular actors continued to rapidly appear in kabuki theatre, where realistic performances came in vogue.Template:Sfn Yakusha-e came to favour a greater emphasis on the individuality of the actors, and buyers came to expect pictures with the actors' likenesses,Template:Efn rather than the stereotyped images of the past, such as those by the once-dominant Torii school.Template:Sfn
Works
Over 140 prints have been established as the work of Sharaku; the majority are portraits of actors or scenes from kabuki theatre, and most of the rest are of sumo wrestlers or warriors.Template:Sfn The prints appeared in the common print sizes aiban, hosoban, and ōban.Template:Efn They are divided into four periods.Template:Sfnm The prints of the first two periods are signed "Tōshūsai Sharaku", the latter two only "Sharaku". The print sizes became progressively smaller and the focus shifts from busts to full-length portraits. The depictions become less expressive and more conventional.Template:Sfn Two picture calendars dating to as early as 1789 and three decorated fans as late as 1803 have been attributed to Sharaku, but have yet to be accepted as authentic works of his.Template:Sfn Sharaku's reputation rests largely on the earlier prints; those from the eleventh month of 1794 and after are considered artistically inferior.Template:Sfn
First period
28 ōban prints make up the first period from the fifth monthTemplate:Efn of Kansei 6 (in 1794).Template:Sfnm They depict actors from kabuki plays performed at three theatres: Hana-ayame Bunroku Soga at the Miyako-za; Katakiuchi Noriyaibanashi and the jōruri Hana-shōbu Omoi no Kanzashi at the Kiri-za; and the kiri-kyōgen Yoshitsune Senbon Zakura at the Kawarazaki-za. These prints are ōkubi yakusha-e against black mica backgrounds, made with a precise, fine line and simple colour scheme. There are printing variants of these early prints, suggesting they went through multiple printings and thus sold relatively well.Template:Sfn
- First-period kabuki portraits
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Sawamura Sōjurō III as Ogishi Kurando
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Segawa Kikujurō III as Oshizu, Wife of Tanabe
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Ōtani Oniji III as Yakko Edobei
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Ichikawa Ebizo IV as Takemura Sadanoshin
Second period
8 ōban and 30 hosoban prints make up the second period from the seventhTemplate:Efn and eighthTemplate:Efn months of Kansei 6 (1794).Template:Sfnm 16 prints are from the jidai-kyōgen Keisei Sanbon Karasaka at Miyako-za in the seventh month; 10 from Nihon Matsu Michinoku Sodachi and the jōruri Katsuragawa Tsuki no Omoide at the Kawarazaki-za in the seventh month; 11 from the jidai-kyōgen Shinrei Yaguchi no Watashi, Yomo no Nishiki Kokyō no Tabiji, and the jōruri Tsuki no Mayu Koi no Monaka at the Kiri-za in the eighth month; and one portrait of Shinozuka Uraeimon as the announcer at Miyako-za.Template:Sfn
Of the 8 ōban prints, 7 are full-length portraits of pairs of actors;Template:Sfn the other is of the announcer at Miyako-za—the only full-body yakusha-e of a single subject in Sharaku's œuvre. The only one of these ōban prints to employ black mica is that of Ichikawa Komazō III as Kameya Chūbei and Nakayama Tomisaburō as Umegawa from Tsuki no Mayu Koi no Monaka. The hosoban prints are all full-body portraits of a single actor against a yellowish background, with the exception of the portraits of Ōtani Oniji II as Kawashima Jibugorō and Ichikawa Omezō I as Tomita Hyōtarō, which are on grey backgrounds.Template:Sfn
- Second-period prints
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Shinozuka Uraeimon as the announcer at Miyako-za
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Ichikawa Komazō III as Kameya Chūbei and Nakayama Tomisaburō as Umegawa
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Ichikawa Omezō I as Tomita Hyōtarō
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Nakayama Tomisaburō as Tsukuba Gozen
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Nakajima Kanzō as Negoto no Chōzō
Third period
47 hosoban, 13 aiban, and 4 ōban prints make up the third period (1794–1795).Template:Sfnm From the eleventhTemplate:Efn month of Kansei 6, 18 of the prints come from Oshukubai Koi no Hatsune at the Miyako-za; 21 from Otokoyama Oedo no Ishizue and the jōruri Shinobu Koi Suzume no Irodoki at the Kiri-za; 15 from Matsuhamisa Onna Kusunoki and the jōruri Kagurazuki Iwai no Iroginu at the Kawarazaki-za; 4 are of sumo wrestlers, one of which is a triptych; and two are a memorial to Template:Interlanguage link. From the intercalary 11thTemplate:Efn month, 3 prints are from Hana no Miyako Kuruwa no Nawabari at the Miyako-za. By this period the artistry in Sharaku's work has noticeably deteriorated and displays less of Sharaku's individual touch.Template:Sfn
Most of the hosoban prints distinguish themselves in Sharaku's œuvre by having backgrounds of trees or other stage scenery, though a few have empty yellowish ones. Sharaku focuses on transitional poses as before, but the busier designs weaken the effect by drawing attention away from the actors' expressions to other elements of the composition. Most of the aiban prints are more typically Sharaku in that they focus on the upper body and facial expressions against an empty background, this time yellowish.Template:Sfn
- Third-period prints
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Arashi Ryūzō II as Ōtomo Yamanushi
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Nakamura Nakazō II as the farmer Tsuchizō, actually Prince Koretaka
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Nakamura Noshio II as Konohana, Daughter of Ki no Tsurayuki
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Daidōzan Bungorō enters the sumo ring
Fourth period
10 hosoban and 5 aiban prints make up the fourth period from the firstTemplate:Efn month of Kansei 7 (1795).Template:Sfnm 3 prints come from Nido no Kake Katsuiro Soga at the Kiri-za; 7 from Edo Sunago Kichirei Soga and Godairiki Koi no Fūjime at the Miyako-za; 1 is a sumo print; 2 are musha-e warrior prints; and 1 is of the god of luck Ebisu.Template:Sfn
- Fourth-period prints
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Ichikawa Ebizō as Kudō Saemon Suketsune
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Ichikawa Danjūrō VI as Soga no Gorō Tokimune
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Sawamura Sōjūrō III as Satsuma Gengobei
Style and analysis
Energy and dynamism are the primary features of Sharaku's portraits, rather than the idealized beauty typical of ukiyo-eTemplate:Sfn—Sharaku highlights unflattering features such as large noses or the wrinkles of aging actors.Template:Sfn
In his actor prints Sharaku usually depicts a single figure with a focus on facial expression.Template:Sfn To Template:Interlanguage link Sharaku was able "to depict, within a single print, two or three levels of character revealed in the single moment of action forming the climax to a scene or performance".Template:Sfn In contrast to the static actor prints of a contemporary artist such as Katsukawa Shun'ei, who emphasized the narrative moment of his subjects in the plays depicted, Sharaku focused on the actor's and character's psychology, delivering an "almost caricature-like exaggeration, a heightened sense of theatrical gesture", according to art historian David Bell.Template:Sfn Occasionally two figures appear, revealing a contrast of types, as of different facial shapes, or a beautiful face contrasted with one more plain.Template:Sfn
Most ukiyo-e artists gained apprenticeship experience and connections by working for an artistic school, such as the Torii or Utagawa school. Sharaku did not, which likely contributed to his failure to find a sufficient audience to succeed.Template:Sfn Sharaku shows the skill of a master, despite scant evidence that he had prior experience designing prints.Template:Sfn Nonetheless, from the first Sharaku's prints appeared amongst the technical vanguard, with unusually realistic portrayals of their subjects and using extravagant techniques such as the dusting of mica in the backgrounds. From such beginnings, though, the quality of his work quickly fades.Template:Sfn
To Jack Ronald Hillier, there are occasional signs of Sharaku struggling with his medium. Hillier compares Sharaku to French painter Paul Cézanne, who he believes "has to struggle to express himself, hampered and angered by the limitations of his draughtsmanship".Template:Sfn
Identity
Ukiyo-e artists had low social status, and what personal details remain in the record tend to be sparse; Sharaku nevertheless presents an exceptional case in the utter absence of these details.Template:Sfn Biographers have long searched, but have had no luck in shining light on the identity of Sharaku.Template:Sfn The popularity the prints have attained feeds interest in the mystery, which in turns contributes further to interest the prints.Template:Sfn Of the more than fifty theories proposed,Template:Sfn few have been taken seriously, and none has found wide acceptance.Template:Sfn
A book on haiku theory and aesthetics from 1776 includes two poems attributed to a Sharaku, and references to a Nara poet by the same name appear in a 1776 manuscript and a 1794 poetry collection. No evidence aside from proximity in time has established a connection with the artist Sharaku.Template:Sfn A Shinto document of 1790 records the name Katayama Sharaku as husband of a disciple of the sect in Osaka. No further information is known of either the disciple or her husband.Template:Sfn A resemblance of Sharaku's kinetic kabuki portraits to those of Osaka-based contemporaries Ryūkōsai and Nichōsai has further fueled the idea of an Osaka-area origin.Template:Sfn
Rare calendar prints from 1789 and 1790 that bear the pseudonym "Sharakusai" have surfaced; that they may have been by Sharaku has not been dismissed, but they bear little obvious stylistic resemblance to Sharaku's identified work.Template:Sfn
Though disputed, Sharaku's prints have been said to resemble the masks of Noh theatre;Template:Sfn connections have been deduced from numerous documents that suggest to some researchers that Sharaku was a Noh actor serving under the lord of Awa Province, in modern Tokushima Prefecture. Amongst these documents are those that suggest Sharaku died between 1804 and 1807, including a Meiji-era manuscript that specifies the seventeenth day of the fifth month of 1806, and that his grave was marked in Kaizenji Temple in Asakusa in Edo.Template:Sfn Other similar theories, some discredited, include those that Sharaku was Noh actor Saitō Jūrōbei,Template:Efn Harutō Jizaemon,Template:Efn or Harutō Matazaemon.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn
In 1968Template:Sfn Tetsuji Yura proposed that Sharaku was Hokusai. The claim is also found in the Ukiyo-e Ruikō ("Various Thoughts on Ukiyo-e"), and Sharaku's prints came during an alleged period of reduced productivity for Hokusai.Template:Sfn Though known primarily for his landscapes of the 19th centuryTemplate:Sfn before Sharaku's arrival Hokusai produced over a hundred actor portraits—an output that ceased in 1794.Template:Sfn Hokusai changed his art name dozens of times throughout his long career—government censorship under the Kansei ReformsTemplate:Efn may have motivated him to choose a name to distance his actor portraits from his other work.Template:Sfn As ukiyo-e artists normally do not carve their own woodblocks, a change in carver could explain differences in line quality.Template:Sfn
Others proposed identities include Sharaku's publisher Tsutaya or Tsutaya's father-in-law; the artists Utamaro, Template:Interlanguage link, Utagawa Toyokuni, or Maruyama Ōkyo; the painter-poet Tani Bunchō; the writer Template:Interlanguage link; an unnamed Dutch artist; or actually three people.Template:Sfn Yet another proposed identity is the author Santō Kyōden; Tani Minezō points out that Sharaku's brief career is concurrent with Kyōden's temporary break from writing gesaku due to grief over the sudden death of his wife Kikuzono around 1793.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Reception and legacy
The Edo public reacted poorly to Sharaku's portraits.Template:Sfn More copies of the larger, first-period works remain, suggesting they enjoyed greater popularity than the later works; most for which only a single copy remains come from the later periods.Template:Sfn
Contemporaries such as Utamaro who also worked in a relatively realistic style presented their subjects in a positive, beautifying way. Sharaku did not avoid depicting less flattering aspects of his subjects—he was the "arch-purveyor of vulgarities" to 19th-century art historian Ernest Fenollosa. An inscription on Utamaro's portrait of 1803 appears to target criticism at Sharaku's approach;Template:Sfn appearing eight years after Sharaku's supposed disappearance suggests that Sharaku's presence was still somehow felt, despite his lack of acceptance.Template:Sfn
The subject of an Eishōsai Chōki portrait of Takashimaya O-Hisa holds a hand fan decorated with Sharaku's Kōshirō Matsumoto IV as Sakanaya Gorobee.Template:Sfn On a decorated kite illustrated in Jippensha Ikku's book Shotōzan Tenarai Hōjō (1796) appears Sharaku's depiction of kabuki actor Ichikawa Ebizō IV; the accompanying text is filled with puns, jargon, and double entendres that have invited interpretation as commentary on the decline of Sharaku's later works and events surrounding his departure from the ukiyo-e world,Template:Sfn including speculation that he had been arrested and imprisoned.Template:Sfn Ikku published under Sharaku's publisher Tsutaya from late 1794, and the book is the earliest to mention Sharaku.Template:Sfn The Ukiyo-e Ruikō, the oldest surviving work on ukiyo-e, contains the oldest direct comment on Sharaku's work:Template:Sfn
The Ukiyo-e Ruikō was not a published book, but a manuscript that was hand-copied over generations, with great variations in content, some of which has fueled speculation as to Sharaku's identity.Template:Sfnm including a versionTemplate:Efn that calls Sharaku "Hokusai II".Template:Sfn Shikitei Sanba wrote in 1802 of ukiyo-e artists, and included an illustration of active and inactive artists and their schools as a map; Sharaku appears as an inactive artist depicted as a solitary island with no followers.Template:Sfn Essayist Template:Interlanguage link wrote in the early 19th century that Sharaku "should be praised for his elegance and strength of line".Template:Sfn
Sharaku's work was popular among European collectors,Template:Sfn but rarely received mention in print until German collector Julius Kurth's book Sharaku appeared in 1910.Template:Sfn Kurth ranked Sharaku's portraits with those of Rembrandt and Velázquez,Template:Sfn and asserted Sharaku was Noh actor Saitō Jūrōbei.Template:Sfn The book ignited international interest in the artist, resulting in a reevaluation that has placed Sharaku amongst the greatest ukiyo-e masters.Template:Sfn In his Chats on Japanese Prints of 1915 Arthur Davison Ficke declared, "Sharaku stands on the highest level of genius, in a greatness unique, sublime, and appalling."Template:Sfn The first in-depth work on Sharaku was Harold Gould Henderson and Louis Vernon Ledoux's The Surviving Works of Sharaku in 1939.Template:Sfn Certain portraits such as Ōtani Oniji III are particularly well known.Template:Sfn
Just over 600 copies of Sharaku's prints are known; only about 100 remain in Japan.Template:Sfn As they are in collections scattered throughout the world general research on Sharaku's works has followed different threads in Japan and the West has proved time-consuming. Japanese researchers have better knowledge of and access to documents and literature related to Sharaku's time and conditions. On the other hand, Sharaku's works tend to be in Western collections, including prints for which only one copy is known—of which there are about three dozen.Template:Sfn Sharaku's ōban prints with mica backgrounds most likely cost more than the average, though prices can be only speculated due to a lack of records.Template:Efn Values of the prints today vary depending on size, condition, and subjective quality. Prices for them at auction have risen steadily from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries: for a print with a mica background sold in Japan prices jumped from a typical 15 yen (roughly a third of a banker's initial monthly salary) in 1895 to 300 yen in 1915. Sharaku's Arashi Ryūzō I as Ishibe Kinkichi sold at Sotheby's for US$Template:Val in 1975, at Christie's for GBP£Template:Val in 1989,Template:Sfn and €389,000 at Template:Interlanguage link in Paris in 2009, setting a record auction price for a Sharaku print.Template:Sfn
Identifying the period into which Sharaku's work falls posed difficulties that have since become clear.Template:Sfn The prints bear no dates. Kurth first proposed that they spanned the nine years of 1787 to 1795. Further research led Kazuo Inoue (ja) to reduce the date span to 17 months from 1794 to 1795, which Henderson and Ledoux further narrowed to 10 months in those years.Template:Sfn Such dates have been determined based on comparative research into theatre programmes and chronologies.Template:Sfn
Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein believed that objective realism was not the only valid means of expression. He found Sharaku "repudiated normalcy"Template:Sfn and departed from strict realism and anatomical proportions to achieve expressive, emotional effects.Template:Sfn
1983 saw the appearance of the novels Phantom Sharaku by Akiko Sugimoto—a novel whose protagonist is TsutayaTemplate:Sfn—and The Case of the Sharaku Murders by Katsuhiko Takahashi.Template:Sfn In 1995 Masahiro Shinoda directed a fictionalized film of Sharaku's career, Sharaku.Template:Sfn
Notes
References
Works cited
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Further reading
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External links
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