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Woman
Painting a Dragon
by Totoya Hokkei (1780-1850)
Japan, Edo period, about 1832
woodblock print, pigment on paper, 8 1/4 x 71/4 inches (21
x 18.5 cm)
Friends of the Asian Art Association
1986.185
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Totoya
Hokkei, a student of the well-known ukiyo-e artist Katsushika
Hokusai, was a fish seller who changed his profession to become
a successful designer of privately published woodblock prints
(surimono). This print depicts a woman painting a dragon that
comes to life, rising from her fan in a trail of clouds, and was
probably inspired by legends of early Chinese painters who mastered
this astonishing feat. It is likely that this work was commissioned
by a poetry club or a literary society in 1832, the year of the
water dragon.
To
Japan
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