The Actor Sanogawa Ichimatsu Holding a Lantern and an Umbrella
Artist/Maker
Ishikawa Toyonobu 石川豊信
(Japanese, 1711–1785)
Date1744–51
MediumWoodblock print (beni-e); ink on paper with hand coloring
DimensionsHabahiro hashira-e; overall: 28 15/16 × 10 in. (73.5 × 25.4 cm)
Credit LineMary A. Ainsworth Bequest
Object number1950.209
Status
Not on viewThe kabuki actor Sanogawa Ichimatsu (1722–62) was the most popular player of his era for wakashū 若衆 roles. The term refers to a young man from roughly his early teens to the coming of age ceremony (genpuku 元服) that marked his adulthood. Although sometimes difficult to distinguish from images of young women, wakashū wore a distinctive hairstyle, with a shaved patch on the tops of their heads. Sometimes objects of erotic desire for women or older men, wakashū acted as a kind of “third gender” in Edo-period society.
In this wide pillar print the actor performs a slow “journey scene” (michiyuki) in an unknown play, holding a paper lantern and umbrella that suggest travel on a rainy night. The circular crest with the character 同 was Ichimatsu’s professional crest, but the checker-board pattern on his sash also helps to identify the actor. The pattern was used when Ichimatsu performed the role of Koshō Kumenosuke for the play Nanohana Akebono Soga in 1741, and became so popular and famous that even today it is known as the “Ichimatsu pattern.”
Exhibition History
In this wide pillar print the actor performs a slow “journey scene” (michiyuki) in an unknown play, holding a paper lantern and umbrella that suggest travel on a rainy night. The circular crest with the character 同 was Ichimatsu’s professional crest, but the checker-board pattern on his sash also helps to identify the actor. The pattern was used when Ichimatsu performed the role of Koshō Kumenosuke for the play Nanohana Akebono Soga in 1741, and became so popular and famous that even today it is known as the “Ichimatsu pattern.”
An American University Collection: Works of Art from the Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, Ohio
- Kenwood House, London (May 3, 1962 - October 30, 1962 )
Japanese Prints from the Ainsworth Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 18, 1979 - October 21, 1979 )
Ukiyo-e Prints from the Mary Ainsworth Collection
- Chiba City Museum of Art, Chiba, Japan (April 13, 2019 - May 25, 2019 )
- Shizuoka City Museum of Art, Shizuoka, Japan (June 8, 2019 - July 28, 2019 )
- Osaka City Museum of Fine Arts, Osaka, Japan (August 10, 2019 - September 29, 2019 )
Ukiyo-e Prints from the Mary Ainsworth Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 14, 2020 - December 6, 2020 )
Collections
- Asian
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late 19th century
late 19th century
late 19th–early 20th century
late 19th century