Dwarf Potted Trees in Paintings, Scrolls
and Woodblock Prints
 

JAPAN -- BACKGROUND


Woodblock Prints

     The term ukiyo was originally a Buddhist reference to the present mundane world as opposed to the future life.  During the late sixteenth century, when the ambitious son of a farmer became Toyotomi Hideyoshi, ruler of the entire country, the meaning of the word changed radically.  The world in which a man could gain wealth and power just by utilizing his talents as opposed to who his forebearers were came to be considered a heaven rather than the hell of previous ages.  In this way ukiyo came to mean "paradise" or "floating world." 
      In many ways the most remarkable by-product of the Tokugawa governmental system was the emergence of a kind of art made for and by the common people, especially the city dwellers, the artisans and traders.  The style originated in the old capital of Kyoto.  It argues for the homogeneity of the Japanese culture, one of the positive and permanent blessings of the shogunate, and it proves the penetration of the civilization through all the classes.  That the sons of firemen, superintendents of tenement houses, and embroiderers should be counted among the great artists of the world is not surprising today, but that these men of little education should have arisen in the late feudal age in Japan is only explicable if one admits their artistic sinsibility can be quite independent of other aspects of education.
     The term e means "picture."
     What became known as the Ukiyo-e school of art had appeared in the early sixteenth century and aimed at depicting the social life of the day, particularly of the lower classes.  This was done, at first, in illustrations for storybooks and, later, as independent prints.  All of the Ukiyo-e painters, starting about 1658, were engaged in the production of woodblock prints for this.
     Initially, a monochrome print from a single block was very common, and only occasionally was it decorated by hand-coloring.  At the beginning of the eighteenth century, lighter tones of vegetable pigments were favored, with crimson as the central color ( beni-e ).  In the 1720's the colors available were dominated by mineral pigments of vermillion ( tan ) from cinnabar, and green ( roku ) from copper oxide.  The pigments were prepared and perfected with the same zeal and care as in Renaissance Italy.  The hand-made Japanese mulberry-bark paper was usually of superior quality.
     After 1744 two to five blocks were utilized, with crimson still as the dominant color.  The polychromatic print -- in the genuine sense of the term -- appeared two decades later, and then it was given the flattering name of "brocade print" ( nishiki-e ).  The colors seeped deep into the paper, becoming a part of it.  When examined against the light, to a Westerner, they gave the illusion comparable only to the beauty of stained glass windows of medieval cathedrals. 
     The works of the Nagasaki print-makers chiefly depicted Dutch and Chinese topics as seen in and around the harbor.  Fauna imported by these foreigners is also to be seen.  Many of the Nagasaki-e show the influence of Dutch copper-plate engravings and late Ming paintings.  Like the Edo-e, the earlier southwestern Japanese pictures were printed on paper of poor quality and sold at ridiculously low prices to travellers, businessmen, scholars, artists and other visitors to the port as souvenirs. 1
 

 

Surimono Woodblock Prints

     Surimono (lit. "printed things") were privately commissioned sumptuous limited edition prints, smaller in size than standard woodblock prints.  They date from the 1740s and the art reached its height in the early nineteenth century. 
     The production of surimono, like all Japanese prints, was a cooperative effort involving the poet, artist, publisher, and engraver.  Groups of amateur poets or individuals would commission these prints for special occasions such as business openings, musical or stage performances, or season celebration -- especially New Year.  (Poetry groups included hundreds of members with affiliated groups in provincial towns throughout Japan.)  One or more thirty-one syllable kyoka (“mad poems,” 5-7-5-7-7) to be included in the composition were presented to the professional artist.  The text on surimono was important both for its meaning and its visual effect.  Each verse contained a word which indicated the season.  The print was based on or played off of the poetic subjects.
     The designers often pioneered subject matter that found its way into commercial prints later.  If surimono developed to satisfy a taste for subjects and treatment that were not available in commercial prints, it is no wonder that their popularity declined once their most important features had been adopted into commercial publications.  On the other hand, still life was one subject thoroughly explored by surimono designers but never adopted by commercial artists. 
     Printing techniques included metal powders, expensive pigments, and delicate materials such as mother-of-pearl (hence a heavier stock was needed to support these limited edition prints).  While commerical prints were issued in editions of many thousands, private orders for surimono were rarely even in the several hundreds. 
     The thick paper used for surimono was particularly suited for embossing, and this was used with great taste and imagination from the 1790s on.  More pigments were employed starting around the late 1810s and gold was used in the next decade, sometimes as background color. 2

A Guide to the Ukiyoe-Sites of the Internet
(not yet searched through for dwarf potted tree portrayals...)



 
NOTES

1.     Hájek, Lubor Japanese Graphic Arts (London: Octopus Books Unlimited; 1976) pp. 27-30; Japan, The Official Guide (Tokyo: Board of Tourist Industry, Japanese Government Railways; 1933, 1941), pg. 167;

Mody, N.H.N. A Collection of Nagasaki Colour Prints and Paintings (Rutland, VT and Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company, Inc.; 1969.  Original limited edition in 2 volumes, 1939), pg. xxvii;

Kikuchi, Sadao  A Treasury of Japanese Wood Block Prints, Ukiyo-e   (New York: Crown Publishers, Inc.; Translation ©1969 by Tokyo International Publishers, Illustrations ©1963 Kawadeshobo, Tokyo.  Translated by Don Kenny), pp. 29, 32;

Paine, Robert Treat and Alexander Soper  The Art and Architecture of Japan (NY: Penguin Books; 1981, Third edition), pp. 245, 251.

2.      Keyes, Roger S.  Japanese Woodblock Prints, A Catalogue of the Mary A. Ainsworth Collection (Oberlin, OH: Oberlin College; 1984), pg. 46;

Keyes,  Roger S.  Surimono, Privately Published Japanese Prints in the Spencer Museum of Art (Tokyo/New York: Kodansha International Ltd.; 1984), pp. 14, 16-17, 19;

Mirviss, Joan B.  The Frank Lloyd Wright Collection of Surimono (New York: Weatherhill, Inc. and Phoenix, AZ: Phoenix Art Museum; 1995), pp. 12-17, 37; and the related "Surimono: Japanese Prints From the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives," a display of sixty surimono at the Phoenix Art Museum, October 1990-January 1991.


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