Courtesan with a Young Man (Wakashu) beside a Screen Hishikawa Moronobu ???? Japanese ca. 1679–84 In ukiyo-e prints, male youths known as wakashu—identified by unshaved forelocks and an upright topknot—are often paired with courtesans. This image belongs to a set of fourteen erotic prints known as makura-e (pillow pictures), or shunga (spring pictures) in modern parlance. While most makura-e within a set tend to be explicit, there are usually two or three earlier in the sequence, as here, that merely hint at romance. View more. Courtesan with a Young Man (Wakashu) beside a Screen. Hishikawa Mo


Courtesan with a Young Man (Wakashu) beside a Screen Hishikawa Moronobu ???? Japanese ca. 1679–84 In ukiyo-e prints, male youths known as wakashu—identified by unshaved forelocks and an upright topknot—are often paired with courtesans. This image belongs to a set of fourteen erotic prints known as makura-e (pillow pictures), or shunga (spring pictures) in modern parlance. While most makura-e within a set tend to be explicit, there are usually two or three earlier in the sequence, as here, that merely hint at romance. View more. Courtesan with a Young Man (Wakashu) beside a Screen. Hishikawa Moronobu ???? (Japanese, 1618–1694). Japan. ca. 1679–84. Woodblock print (sumizuri-e); ink and hand-applied color on paper; horizontal ?ban. Edo period (1615–1868). Prints


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