Object data
nishikie
height 186 mm × width 188 mm
Hasegawa Settan
Japan, 1831
nishikie
height 186 mm × width 188 mm
…; collection Gasai Sadachika, Japan;…; purchased from the dealer Hotei Japanese Prints, Leiden, by J.H.W. Goslings (1943-2011), Epse, near Deventer, 1995;1 by whom donated to the museum, 1999
Object number: RP-P-1999-257-19
Credit line: Gift of J.H.W. Goslings, Epse
Copyright: Public domain
This print was preserved in an album apparently compiled by Gasai Sadachika at the age of 67 in the autumn of the Year of the Dog in the Kaei period, Kanoe inu, 1850, containing works predominantly by Settan and other designers. For more prints from this album, see e.g. RP-P-1999-257-1.
Hasegawa Settan (1778–1843), a pupil of Utagawa Toyokuni, was probably best known for his illustrations to the Illustrated Famous Places of Edo, Edo meisho zue (1834/1836), and the Annual Events in the Eastern Capital, Toto saijiki (1832). He received the honorary rank of hokkyo in about 1824.
Yellow nanohana (Brassica rapa var.) flowers blooming in spring.
The print is dated at left 'New Hare Year', Kano to u no toshi, i.e., 1831.
Two anonymous haiku poems, possibly by the designer.
Issued by the poet
Signature reading: hokkyo Settan no zu, with seal: Gangaku
M. Forrer, Surimono in the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam, Leiden 2013, no. 58
M. Forrer, 2013, 'Hasegawa Settan, Flowers, Japan, 1831', in Surimono from the Goslings Collection in the Rijksmuseum, online coll. cat. Amsterdam: hdl.handle.net/10934/RM0001.COLLECT.363641
(accessed 10 November 2024 04:26:59).