Artwork Page for Courtesans Promenading on the Nakanochō

Details / Information for Courtesans Promenading on the Nakanochō

Courtesans Promenading on the Nakanochō

仲之町の花魁道中

c. 1790
(Japanese, 1769–1825)
Measurements
Each: 37.5 x 25.4 cm (14 3/4 x 10 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

Nakanochō was the main street in Yoshiwara, a famous walled pleasure district that housed as many as 4,000 courtesans. In the early evening, elaborately dressed courtesans accompanied by attendants promenaded on the central thoroughfare, as in this scene. The open buildings with shop curtains hanging from their eaves are teahouses, establishments where men could arrange appointments with courtesans of the more prestigious brothels.
A vertically oriented color woodblock print depicts five people with light skin tones near a wooden building. On the left, a woman in a black and tan kimono sits holding a pipe. Centered, a woman in a patterned black kimono stands facing left. Other figures stand behind her. Above them, round lanterns hang from the eaves below a slatted balcony, while tall paper lanterns sit on the floor in the foreground.

Courtesans Promenading on the Nakanochō

c. 1790

Utagawa Toyokuni

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

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