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JAPANESE COLOUR-PRINTS
- on the left a woman half undressed, her foot playing in the water with fish swimming about it; behind her a woman standing; to the right is one wringing water out of her clothes, and beside her a companion kneeling by a basket. The half-clad figures, which Goncourt rightly calls un peu mannequinèes, are drawn with uncommon precision; the outlines of the nude are printed in a dark reddish brown.
- Female divers in junks.
Utamaro also published a countless number of series, of which the following may be mentioned:—
- Geishas celebrating the Niwaka Festival, 6 sheets (dating from the seventies?).
- Signboards of the most celebrated saké-houses, represented by women who have at their feet purple mats and stand out against the yellow background; 6 sheets, about 1790.
- The Kamuros of the Yoshiwara, 6 sheets, also a continuation in 7 sheets.
- Courtesans and geishas compared with flowers.
- The five festal days.
- The six arms of the Tamagawa River, women on undulating ground; at the top views on fans.
- The six views of the Tamagawa River, women promenading.
- Women compared with landscapes in the vicinity of the Yoshiwara, 8 sheets.
- The six poetesses.
- Courtesans compared with the six poets.
- The story of the fair Osomi and the clerk Hisamatsu.
- Examples of beautiful women typifying the seven-fold fortune, the gods of fortune each represented by a female figure in a circular frame.
- Half-length figures on a mica ground, two series of ten leaves each (illustrated in Kurth, pl. 17, a girl before a mirror).
- Half-length figures of women in pairs, several series; among them one representing the four seasons, and another of the same kind representing the twelve hours of the day.
- Large heads, more than a hundred sheets.
- Bijin ichisai goyusan tsugi, the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido