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The Pyramids in Egypt, a Newly Published Dutch Perspective Picture

Artist/Maker (Japanese, d. 1829)
Date1810s
MediumColor woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
DimensionsHorizontal ōban; overall: 10 3/16 × 14 15/16 in. (25.8 × 37.9 cm)
Credit LineMary A. Ainsworth Bequest
Object number1950.672
Status
Not on view
More Information
Japanese artists learned the methods of western perspective via an illustrated Chinese translation of a European treatise on perspective, which was published in Canton in the early 1730s and found its way to Edo by 1739. Around 1770 Utagawa Toyoharu, a young Edo artist, began designing a series of block-printed miniature views for use in hand-held optical viewing devices. Later he redesigned many of the miniature pictures as full-size horizontal prints. The vogue for these perspective prints lasted into the 19th century. The format of Kuninaga's view of the pyramids in Egypt, with a printed borderline and a printed picture title at the right, was introduced by Toyoharu.
Exhibition History
The Cultured Landscape in China and Japan
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 6, 2007 - August 13, 2007 )
Collections
  • Asian