Artwork Page for Courtesans of the Ōgiya on a Spring Outing

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Courtesans of the Ōgiya on a Spring Outing

mid- or late 1790s
(Japanese, 1769–1825)
Measurements
Sheet: 36.9 x 23.8 cm (14 1/2 x 9 3/8 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

In these prints, two courtesans of the Ōgiya brothel are entering an open pavilion, while another group gathers around a Japanese hibachi inside. Hanaōgi, the most celebrated courtesan of Ōgiya in the late 1700s, is depicted at a desk. Holding a brush in her hand, she turns her head to one side as if gathering her thoughts before writing in the book before her. Both her position and her loosened hair separate Hanaōgi from her courtesan companions who wear elaborate coiffures. This depiction of her captures both her knowledge of poetry and her skill as a calligrapher.
A vertical woodblock print depicts three women with pale skin and black hair adorned with pins. On the left, a woman in a red and pink patterned kimono sits on a golden floor looking toward the center. A standing woman wears a black sash with fan designs over a red and white robe, while a third woman stands behind. At the left, a blossoming branch hangs over a bamboo fence against a neutral background.

Courtesans of the Ōgiya on a Spring Outing

mid- or late 1790s

Utagawa Toyokuni

(Japanese, 1769–1825)
Japan, Edo period (1615–1868)

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