Difference between revisions of "Ryukosai Jokei"

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(Created page with " Ryûkôsai Jokei, also known as Taga Jihei, was a Kamigata-based ''ukiyo-e'' artist, active c. 1777-1809. He is known for his images of kabuki actors (''[[yakush...")
 
 
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*''Japanese'': 流光斎如圭 ''(Ryûkôsai Jokei)''
  
 
Ryûkôsai Jokei, also known as Taga Jihei, was a [[Kamigata]]-based ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artist, active c. 1777-1809.
 
Ryûkôsai Jokei, also known as Taga Jihei, was a [[Kamigata]]-based ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' artist, active c. 1777-1809.

Latest revision as of 03:34, 31 July 2020

  • Japanese: 流光斎如圭 (Ryûkôsai Jokei)

Ryûkôsai Jokei, also known as Taga Jihei, was a Kamigata-based ukiyo-e artist, active c. 1777-1809.

He is known for his images of kabuki actors (yakusha-e), and in particular has been identified as perhaps the first to depict onnagata not as the women they were pretending to be, but more accurately, as men playing a female role. For example, the onnagata depicted in the illustrated book Ehon niwa tazumi (1790) have decidedly masculine facial features.

References

  • Joshua Mostow, "Wakashu as a Third Gender and Gender Ambiguity through the Edo Period," in Mostow and Asato Ikeda (eds.), A Third Gender, Royal Ontario Museum (2016), 34.