Tetsukuri no Tamagawa on the Musashino Plain ca. 1800 Utagawa Toyokuni I Japanese This triptych has an eye-catching composition featuring beautiful women. Two figures in dark kimonos with kasuri patterns are particularly striking. The subject matter of Six Jewel Rivers, known as Mu-Tamagawa, was inspired by classical waka poems and became popular in the pictorial tradition during the Edo period. The depiction of one of the Six Jewel Rivers, Tetsukuri no Tamagawa in Ch?fu, west of Tokyo, usually includes the beating, rinsing, and drying of clothes. In Toyokuni's print, six women are arranged in


Tetsukuri no Tamagawa on the Musashino Plain ca. 1800 Utagawa Toyokuni I Japanese This triptych has an eye-catching composition featuring beautiful women. Two figures in dark kimonos with kasuri patterns are particularly striking. The subject matter of Six Jewel Rivers, known as Mu-Tamagawa, was inspired by classical waka poems and became popular in the pictorial tradition during the Edo period. The depiction of one of the Six Jewel Rivers, Tetsukuri no Tamagawa in Ch?fu, west of Tokyo, usually includes the beating, rinsing, and drying of clothes. In Toyokuni's print, six women are arranged in the foreground with a sense of lateral rhythmic Tetsukuri no Tamagawa on the Musashino Plain. Utagawa Toyokuni I (Japanese, 1769–1825). Japan. ca. 1800. Triptych of woodblock prints; ink and color on paper. Edo period (1615–1868). Prints


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