This plate from the Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys (Kyōsen Omocha-shū) by Kawasaki Kyosen (1877–1942) sets a white ox toy above a decorated tray painted with a red sea-creature and small figures. The ox, a beast of field and festival, and the painted tray belong to the everyday and seasonal toys of Japan, and Kyosen recorded them together among the playthings he gathered across the country.
The sheet is omocha-e, the picture of toys, drawn from life and printed by woodblock. The white ox is held mostly in the reserved paper with restrained colour, the tray laid in clearer reds and earth tones below, and a red seal placed at the side. The economy is deliberate, leaving the pale ox and the bright tray to balance the sheet.
On a wall the print is calm and characterful. The quiet ox and the lively tray give a room two contrasting points of interest against the open paper. It suits a kitchen, a child's room, or a hallway, and pairs naturally with pale wood an . . . Read More >>
This plate from the Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys (Kyōsen Omocha-shū) by Kawasaki Kyosen (1877–1942) sets a white ox toy above a decorated tray painted with a red sea-creature and small figures. The ox, a beast of field and festival, and the painted tray belong to the everyday and seasonal toys of Japan, and Kyosen recorded them together among the playthings he gathered across the country.
The sheet is omocha-e, the picture of toys, drawn from life and printed by woodblock. The white ox is held mostly in the reserved paper with restrained colour, the tray laid in clearer reds and earth tones below, and a red seal placed at the side. The economy is deliberate, leaving the pale ox and the bright tray to balance the sheet.
On a wall the print is calm and characterful. The quiet ox and the lively tray give a room two contrasting points of interest against the open paper. It suits a kitchen, a child's room, or a hallway, and pairs naturally with pale wood and other folk-art prints.
Each print is made to order on thick, smooth fine-art paper, framed behind shatter-resistant acrylic, or as a satin-coated cotton canvas. Choose the format that suits your wall.
Frequently asked questions
What does this print show?
A white ox toy above a decorated tray painted with a red sea-creature and small figures, drawn from life.
What kind of toys are these?
Everyday and seasonal Japanese folk toys: a wheeled or carved ox and a painted tray, of the kind sold at fairs and shrines.
Where does the image come from?
From Kawasaki Kyosen's Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys, an album of omocha-e recording the folk toys of early twentieth-century Japan.
Where does it suit best?
In a kitchen, a child's room, or a hallway, where the quiet ox and lively tray add two contrasting points of interest.
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Japan historical period: Taisho 大正 (1912-1925)
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