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Fourth Print from A Low Tide Pentaptych

汐干五番内 其四

c. 1830
(Japanese, 1797–1861)
Measurements
21.2 x 18.4 cm (8 3/8 x 7 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

This is one of five surimono, privately commissioned prints, making up an image of people collecting sea life at low tide. Ten witty poems, written by members of a poetry circle, appear across the upper part of the composition, with two poems on each print. Based in Edo (now Tokyo), the group was led by Hisakataya Misora (active 1810s–30s), who wrote four of the poems. This composition may have been printed in April, which was considered the best time for beachcombing.
A vertically oriented woodblock print depicts a woman with light skin tone crouching on a rocky shore as she prods shells with a stick while looking back over her shoulder. She wears a brown striped kimono tied with a red checkered sash. Behind her sits a woven basket. In the distance, small figures wade in blue waters beneath a pale sky decorated with vertical columns of Japanese calligraphy and red seals.

Fourth Print from A Low Tide Pentaptych

c. 1830

Utagawa Kuniyoshi

(Japanese, 1797–1861)
Japan, Edo period (1615–1868)

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