This plate comes from Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys, the woodblock album in which Kawasaki Kyōsen (1877–1942) recorded the folk playthings of old Japan. It is an omocha-e, a toy picture. A kneeling figure wears a round Otafuku mask and balances a small bird, perhaps a hawk, upon the head, while a little horse toy stands at the foot of the sheet.
Kyōsen drew the toys from observation and cut them as a woodblock. The deep black of the robe, the warm flesh of the mask and the muted browns of the horse are set down as flat, deliberate colour. The cream paper holds the figures apart, so each shape stays distinct.
On a wall the plate has a grounded, ceremonial stillness. The kneeling pose anchors the composition, and the small horse below adds a quiet counterweight. It suits an entryway, a study, or a niche where a composed, slightly formal image is welcome.
Printed on heavy fine-art paper with a soft natural-white surface. Framed edit . . . Read More >>
This plate comes from Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys, the woodblock album in which Kawasaki Kyōsen (1877–1942) recorded the folk playthings of old Japan. It is an omocha-e, a toy picture. A kneeling figure wears a round Otafuku mask and balances a small bird, perhaps a hawk, upon the head, while a little horse toy stands at the foot of the sheet.
Kyōsen drew the toys from observation and cut them as a woodblock. The deep black of the robe, the warm flesh of the mask and the muted browns of the horse are set down as flat, deliberate colour. The cream paper holds the figures apart, so each shape stays distinct.
On a wall the plate has a grounded, ceremonial stillness. The kneeling pose anchors the composition, and the small horse below adds a quiet counterweight. It suits an entryway, a study, or a niche where a composed, slightly formal image is welcome.
Printed on heavy fine-art paper with a soft natural-white surface. Framed editions sit behind shatter-resistant acrylic in a slim wooden moulding; the canvas option is a satin-coated cotton weave. The black holds its weight without flattening.
Frequently asked questions
What is shown in this print?
A kneeling figure in a black robe wearing an Otafuku mask with a small bird on the head, and a little horse toy below — drawn from the actual playthings.
Who is Otafuku?
Otafuku, also called Okame, is a round-cheeked smiling woman of folk belief associated with good fortune; her mask was a common festive toy.
Which album is this from?
It is plate Nr. 81 of Kyōsen's Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys (Kyōsen Omocha-shū), a record of traditional folk toys.
Where does this print fit at home?
Its composed, ceremonial stillness suits an entryway, a study, or a niche where a slightly formal image is welcome.
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Japan historical period: Taisho 大正 (1912-1925)
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