Calming the Stormy Sea at Tsunoda in Exile to Sado Island

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Design Concept No. 26 for Utagawa Kuniyoshi: Calming the Stormy Sea at Tsunoda in Exile to Sado Island Japanese Wall Art

Calming the Stormy Sea at Tsunoda in Exile to Sado Island

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The Artwork: Calming the Stormy Sea at Tsunoda in Exile to Sado Island

In 1271 the Buddhist monk Nichiren was sent into exile on Sado Island, off Japan's northern coast. Crossing rough water at Tsunoda, he is said to have knelt in prayer and calmed the storm around his boat. Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1797–1861), the great dramatist among late Edo print designers, drew the legend for his series on the life of Nichiren, made around the 1830s. Heavy waves curl over the small vessel while the praying figure holds the centre still.

The original was a woodblock print. The design was carved into blocks of cherry wood, one block for each colour, and printed by hand onto paper. Kuniyoshi set the quiet figure against the curl and spray of the sea, using a bold outline and strong contrast to hold the monk's calm against the force of the storm.

For all its drama, the print settles well into a calm room. The deep blues and whites of sea and foam stay within a natural, restrained palette, and the centred composition gives the eye a single point to follow . . . Read More >>


Japan historical period: Edo 江戸 (1603-1868)

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The Artist: Utagawa Kuniyoshi

Utagawa Kuniyoshi, Self-portrait from the shunga album Chinpen shinkeibai, 1839

 

Utagawa Kuniyoshi (1798–1861) was one of the last great masters of Japanese Ukiyo-e woodblock prints and a leading figure of the Utagawa school.

Born in Edo (now Tokyo), he showed artistic talent from a young age and was accepted as a pupil by Utagawa Toyokuni I around 1811. Despite a slow start to his career, Kuniyoshi rose to prominence in the late 1820s with his dynamic and heroic warrior prints (musha-e). His breakthrough series was 'One Hundred and Eight Heroes of the Popular Suikoden All Told' (Tsūzoku Suikoden Gōketsu Hyakuhachinin no Hitori), which showcased his talent for dramatic compositions, powerful figures, and intricate details . . . Read More >>

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