From Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys by Kawasaki Kyosen (1877–1942), this plate gathers a family of spotted papier-mâché dog toys — a large white-and-black hound with smaller pups around it — topped by a small red tiger toy. Such dog toys, or inu-hariko, were given as charms for the safe growth of children.
Kyosen drew the group from observation and printed it as omocha-e, a woodblock picture of toys. He set the rounded white bodies and their dark spots against the open ground, with touches of red and a striped ball to enliven the cluster. The flat colour and clear outlines let each figure stay distinct while reading as one cheerful group.
On a wall the print is warm and affectionate. The little dogs suit a nursery, a child's room or a kitchen, and their soft white, black and red palette settles easily beside natural wood and pale walls.
Available as an unframed print on thick matte paper, framed behind shatter-resistant acrylic, or as a sa . . . Read More >>
From Collected Illustrations of Japanese Toys by Kawasaki Kyosen (1877–1942), this plate gathers a family of spotted papier-mâché dog toys — a large white-and-black hound with smaller pups around it — topped by a small red tiger toy. Such dog toys, or inu-hariko, were given as charms for the safe growth of children.
Kyosen drew the group from observation and printed it as omocha-e, a woodblock picture of toys. He set the rounded white bodies and their dark spots against the open ground, with touches of red and a striped ball to enliven the cluster. The flat colour and clear outlines let each figure stay distinct while reading as one cheerful group.
On a wall the print is warm and affectionate. The little dogs suit a nursery, a child's room or a kitchen, and their soft white, black and red palette settles easily beside natural wood and pale walls.
Available as an unframed print on thick matte paper, framed behind shatter-resistant acrylic, or as a satin-coated cotton canvas, each true to the colour and hand-cut line of the original.
Frequently asked questions
What is depicted in this print?
A family of spotted papier-mâché dog toys with a small red tiger on top — traditional Japanese folk playthings drawn from life.
What are inu-hariko dog toys?
They are papier-mâché dog charms traditionally given for the safe and healthy growth of children, recorded here in Kyosen's toy album.
Who is the artist?
Kawasaki Kyosen (1877–1942), who documented Japanese folk toys as woodblock omocha-e in the early twentieth century.
Where does this print suit?
Its affectionate little dogs suit a nursery, child's room or kitchen, beside natural wood and pale walls.
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Japan historical period: Taisho 大正 (1912-1925)
Check out other artwork of Kawasaki Kyosen