Tōkaidō Texts and Tales
Tōkaidō gojūsan tsui by Kuniyoshi, Hiroshige, and Kunisada

Edited by Andreas Marks

With contributions by Laura Allen and Ann Wehmeyer
Hardcover: $80.00
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College Art Association Alfred H. Barr Jr. Award for Smaller Museums, Libraries, Collections, and Exhibitions - Honorable Mention
 
“A beautifully produced volume. . . . Present[s] to a western readership what must be the most detailed and complete analysis yet in English of one of the key woodblock print series inspired by the Tokaido theme.”—East Asian Journal of Popular Culture
 
“Performs a vital service to scholars of Japanese culture and history, media studies, art historians, and anybody interested in the cultural history of travel, roads, and transportation. It reminds us that travel is never just about getting from one place to another.”—Museum Anthropology Review
 
“A pleasure to read. . . . An invitation to a place you haven’t been, but can still glimpse through its pages.”—Journal of Folklore Research
 
"These innovative prints have been considered one of the most seminal series from the era. Tokaido Texts and Tales investigates the sources of the legends, folklore, and fictional stories told in these prints, and persuasively foregrounds the creativity of the printmakers."--Natsu Oyobe, associate curator of Asian art, University of Michigan Museum of Art

"A wonderful addition to our growing knowledge and appreciation of ukiyo-e prints of the late Edo period."--Sarah E. Thompson, assistant curator for Japanese prints, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston



Throughout the Edo period (1615-1868), the Tokaido was the most vital road in a network of highways across Japan. Connecting Edo (modern-day Tokyo) and Kyoto, the road and its fifty-three rest stations became a popular theme for artistic expression in a variety of mediums.


The Tokaido gojusan tsui (Fifty-Three Pairings along the Tokaido Road), created in 1845, is one of the most well-known and fascinating examples of woodblock prints inspired by the road. Japan's three leading print designers of the nineteenth century--Kuniyoshi, Hiroshige, and Kunisada--paired each Tokaido rest station with an intriguing, cryptic design. Due to the harsh and punitive Tenpo-era reforms, which attempted to impose a strictly defined morality, prints of celebrity actors, courtesans, and entertainers were outlawed during this time. Crafted to outwit the artistic restrictions imposed by the reforms, the woodcuts in this series became popular visual puzzles that were frequently reproduced.


Because of this ingenious approach to the Tokaido theme, which ultimately resulted in the creation of new types of art, the Tokaido gojusan tsui has been praised as one of the most innovative and important works from the late Edo period. This series was also the first to be created by more than one artist. Its three designers followed their individual interests and strengths, yet shared a common composition--dominant figures against distant landscapes. They used a variety of motifs, including stories from kabuki theater, poetry, famous tales, legends, landmarks, and local specialties.


Presenting the complete set of Tokaido gojusan tsui prints in vivid color, along with text from the woodcuts transcribed and translated from the Japanese, this book is an invaluable resource for collectors, art historians, and students of this classic technique. Supplementary essays and detailed analyses of the prints help readers share the delight contemporary viewers experienced when these Tokaido woodcuts first appeared on the market.


Andreas Marks is head of the Japanese and Korean Art Department at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts and the author of Kunisada's Tokaido: Riddles in Japanese Woodblock Prints. Laura Allen is curator of Japanese art at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and the coeditor of The Printer's Eye: Ukiyo-e from the Grabhorn Collection. Ann Wehmeyer is associate professor of Japanese and linguistics at the University of Florida and the translator of Motoori Norinaga's Kojiki-den, Book 1.

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Awards
Alfred H. Barr Jr. Award - 2016

An invaluable resource for collectors, art historians, and students of this classic technique. . . . Helps readers share the delight contemporary viewers experienced when these Tokaido woodcuts first appeared on the market.
--Asian Art

Performs a vital service to scholars of Japanese culture and history, media studies, art historians, and anybody interested in the cultural history of travel, roads, and transportation. It reminds us that travel is never just about getting from one place to another.
--Museum Anthropology Review

A pleasure to read. . . . An invitation to a place you haven’t been, but can still glimpse through its pages.
--Journal of Folklore Research

A beautifully produced volume. . . . Present[s] to a western readership what must be the most detailed and complete analysis yet in English of one of the key woodblock print series inspired by the Tokaido theme.
--East Asian Journal of Popular Culture

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