Hamamuraya (The actor Segawa Kikunojo III as Yamato Manzai, actually Shirabyoshi Hisakata of Miyako Kujo)
Artist
Utagawa Toyokuni
(Japanese, 1769 - 1825)
Publisher
Izumiya Ichibei
(Japanese)
Publisher
Kansendō
(Japanese)
Place of OriginJapan
Date1794
CultureJapanese
MaterialsInk and colors on paper
DimensionsH. 15 1/4 in x W. 10 1/4 in, H. 38.7 cm x W. 26 cm (ōban)
Credit LineGift of the Grabhorn Ukiyo-e Collection
Object number2005.100.96
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsPrints And Drawings
On View
Not on viewSignedSignature: 豊国画 Toyokuni ga
MarkingsPublisher’s mark: 泉市版 Sen’ichi han
Censor’s mark: 極 kiwame
More InformationA celebrated specialist in female roles (onnagata), the Kabuki actor Segawa Kikunojo III is identified in the title cartouche by his guild name, Hamamuraya. His distinctive crest, shaped as a bundle of silk, visible on his right shoulder, would have been instantly recognizable to fans in Edo (modern Tokyo). As is often the case in Kabuki, Kikunojo plays a contemporary figure who harbors a double identity. Here he appears as the performer Yamato Manzai, in reality a cross-dressing female entertainer (shirabyoshi) named Hisakata. His gesture—one arm raised, the other swept forward—conveys a sense of dancelike motion. For the role, Kikunojo wears a nobleman’s costume with a lacquered hat (eboshi) tied under the chin, and a man’s folding fan. An outer garment with tachibana (an inedible citrus) and oak leaf roundels on a yellow ground partially conceals a woman’s long-sleeved robe patterned with bold chrysanthemum blossoms.
Katsukawa Shunsho
Utagawa Toyokuni