This plate from Kawasaki Kyosen's Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys (Kyosen Omocha-shu) gathers a set of animal playthings together with a spray of red maple leaves. Kyosen (1877-1942) spent his career recording the regional folk toys of Japan, and here he sets a group of small painted creatures against the autumn leaf, the kind of seasonal pairing that toy-makers and shrines used to mark the turning year.
The sheet follows the omocha-e manner, the picture of toys: each object drawn from life and printed by woodblock. The line is even and the colour soft, with the maple's red set against the muted tones of the figures. The toys sit on bare paper, a red seal at the corner, and the arrangement is spare enough to let each piece be read on its own.
On a wall the print feels seasonal and calm. The warm leaf and the small animals give a room a gentle, autumnal note that is easy to live with. It suits a kitchen, a child's room, or a quiet corner, and pairs natural . . . Read More >>
This plate from Kawasaki Kyosen's Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys (Kyosen Omocha-shu) gathers a set of animal playthings together with a spray of red maple leaves. Kyosen (1877-1942) spent his career recording the regional folk toys of Japan, and here he sets a group of small painted creatures against the autumn leaf, the kind of seasonal pairing that toy-makers and shrines used to mark the turning year.
The sheet follows the omocha-e manner, the picture of toys: each object drawn from life and printed by woodblock. The line is even and the colour soft, with the maple's red set against the muted tones of the figures. The toys sit on bare paper, a red seal at the corner, and the arrangement is spare enough to let each piece be read on its own.
On a wall the print feels seasonal and calm. The warm leaf and the small animals give a room a gentle, autumnal note that is easy to live with. It suits a kitchen, a child's room, or a quiet corner, and pairs naturally with pale wood and other restrained folk prints.
Available as fine-art paper with a soft matte surface, as a framed edition behind shatter-resistant acrylic, or as satin-coated cotton canvas for a warmer, textile feel.
Frequently asked questions
What does this print show?
A group of small animal folk toys arranged with a spray of red autumn maple leaves, all drawn from life.
Where does the image come from?
From Kawasaki Kyosen's Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys, an album of omocha-e recording the regional toys of early twentieth-century Japan.
Why the maple leaves?
Seasonal motifs like autumn maple were common in folk toys and shrine objects; Kyosen records the toy and its seasonal setting together.
Where does it suit best?
In a kitchen, a child's room, or a quiet corner, where its warm autumn note settles easily into the room.
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Japan historical period: Taisho 大正 (1912-1925)
Check out other artwork of Kawasaki Kyosen