Skip to main content
Kameyama: Samurai Mansion
Kameyama: Samurai Mansion

Kameyama: Samurai Mansion

Artist (Japanese, 1914 - 1988)
Place of OriginJapan
DateMarch 1964
PeriodShowa period (1926-1989)
CultureJapanese
MaterialsInk and colors on paper
DimensionsH. 12 3/8 in x W. 17 7/8 in, H. 31.4 cm x W. 45.4 cm (image)
Credit LineMr. and Mrs. Clarence and Kimi Hisatsune
Object number2010.445
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsPrints And Drawings
On View
Not on view
Inscribed"2101" on verso
More Information

関野準一郎作 「新・東海道五十三次の内 亀山(武家屋敷)」木版画 1964年

Sekino Jun'ichiro's New Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido
The Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido is a beloved theme in Japan, made famous in the nineteenth century in prints by Hokusai (1760–1849) and Hiroshige (1797–1858). These artists delighted viewers by depicting the colorful scenery of the fifty-three post stations along the Tokaido, the major transportation route between the cities of Edo (present-day Tokyo) and Kyoto.

In the twentieth century, printmaker Sekino Jun'ichiro revived the Tokaido theme in a series produced over a period of fifteen years, from 1959–1974. Sekino worked in the mode of sosaku hanga, the "creative print" movement, in which the printmaker is directly involved in all steps of the printmaking process—from design, to carving blocks, to the printing itself. This process differed from that of earlier artists like Hokusai and Hiroshige, who relied on specialized artisans for carving and printing. This gives many sosaku hanga prints an artless, folksy quality; however, in this series Sekino demonstrates both his technical expertise and his sophisticated design sensibility.

Some of the prints were given to the AsianArt Museum by the Hisatsune family and bear the artist's personalinscriptions.

Kameyama: Samurai Mansion
Sekino Jun'ichiro
March 1964
Kameyama: Samurai Mansion
Sekino Jun'ichiro
March 1964
Hawk
Sekino Jun'ichiro
1956
A boy
Sekino Jun'ichiro
approx. 1950-1969
Spring Snow, Shirakawa, Kyoto
Sekino Jun'ichiro
approx. 1970-1988
My Family (I)
Sekino Jun'ichiro
approx. 1959-1960
Stone Garden
Sekino Jun'ichiro
1957
Fukuroi: Annual Growth Rings
Sekino Jun'ichiro
December 1960
Shono: White-Rain Downpour
Sekino Jun'ichiro
July 1962
Hara: Roof-Tile Reflection of Mt. Fuji
Sekino Jun'ichiro
October 1964
Mariko: Grated-Yam Soup Shop
Sekino Jun'ichiro
July 1968