Inoue Yasuji

Inoue Yasuji 井上安治 (1864-1889) [a.k.a. Inoue Tankei 井上探景] 


BIOGRAPHY

Sources: Kiyochika: Artist of Meiji Japan, Henry D. Smith II, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, 1988, p.14 and International Fine Print Dealers Association website http://www.ifpda.org/content/node/1126 


Yasuji (seen written as 安治, 安二 and 安治1 and also known as Yasujirō 安治郎, his given name at birth) was Kobayashi Kiyochika's (1847-1915) only true disciple. He was born in 1864 as the son of a dry-goods merchant in Asakusa, and is said to have begun as an apprentice in the atelier of the famous print artist Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892). The story goes that Yasuji encountered Kiyochika one snowy day – probably  in the winter of 1878-79 – sketching a Sumida River landscape. After watching the artist for some two hours in silence, Yasuji struck up a conversation and in short order asked Kiyochika to take him on as a disciple.  


By the time Kiyochika gave up Western-style landscapes in 1881, Yasuji had designed only eight prints in his own name, but he perpetuated his master’s style over the next three years, particularly in the format of small postcard-size prints, reaching a total of 134 by 1884, with his best known series of small prints being an untitled series commonly referred to as Tokyo meisho (Famous Views of Tokyo). Many of his print designs were nearly identical to those of his master's as in the example below.


Like Kyochika, Yasuji would produce several versions of the same print, for instance, one at daylight and one at night. Yasuji’s landscape work has a greater clarity than that of his teacher, and tends to be less dramatic or sentimental. In 1884, however, he completely abandoned this style and turned to conventional nishiki-e triptychs depicting the sights and events of the day in the traditional heroic style, working under the name of Tankei 探景, which the publisher Matsuki Heikichi bestowed on him in 1884. His death1 on September 14, 1889, at the age of twenty-five, is said to have greatly distressed Kiyochika.


Roberts, in his Dictionary of Japanese Artists, comments: "Had he not died so young, [he] might have revived the ukiyo-e school."2


1 I have read in a blog that his death was caused by heart failure.

2 A Dictionary of Japanese Artists: Painting, Sculpture, Ceramics, Print, Lacquer, Laurance P. Roberts, Weatherhill, 1976, p. 198.

Yasuji The Student

Inoue Yasuji,

Iris at Horikiri, c. 1884 

Kiyochika The Master

Kobayashi Kiyochika,

Iris at Horikiri, 1880 

2010 retrospective of Inoue Yasuji's work held at the Tokyo Gas Museum on the 150th anniversary of his death

Inoue Yasuji (1864-1889) was a student of Kobayashi Kiyochika and inherited the tradition of "kōsenga" (light-line painting). However, he died at the young age of 26, before he could fully develop his talent. As a result, he has been overshadowed by Kiyochika and has rarely been given a solo retrospective exhibition.

This exhibition will showcase Inoue's unique artistic style, which combined traditional Japanese techniques with Western influences. It will also explore his innovative use of light and shadow to create atmospheric and dramatic effects.

The exhibition will feature a wide range of Inoue's works, including landscapes, portraits, and historical scenes. It will also include a number of his preparatory sketches and drawings, which provide insights into his creative process.

Source: Translation of commentary on the exhibition as posted on Art & Bell by Tora https://cardiac.exblog.jp/12988782/ [accessed 4-2-24]

Artist's Signatures

Notes: sha 冩 drawn or sketched; ga 画 drawn by; hitsu/fude 筆 brush of; gakō 画工 or 畫工 designed by; ōju 應需 by request.

Inoue Tankei ga

井上探景画

1888

 Inoue Tankei sha

井上探景冩

with Tankei seal 探景, 1887

Inoue Yasuji hitsu?

井上探

Tankei

探景 with Tankei

探景 seal, 1887, 1889

Tankei sha 探景冩 with Tankei

探景 seal

1888

Tankei sha 探景冩

with unread seal, 1888

Tankei

探景

Inoue Tankei ga 井上探景画

with Tankei

探景 seal, 1886

Inoue Tankei ga

井上探景画 with Tankei seal, 1885 

Inoue Tankei ga

井上探景画, 1885

latest revision:

4/02/2024

Prints in Collection

[BELOW PRINTS GIFTED TO THE JORDAN SCHNITZER MUSEUM OF ART, UNIVERSITY OF OREGON]

click on thumbnail for print details

Night View of Ginza Dorii

from the series True Pictures of Famous Places of Tokyo,

c. 1884-1889

IHL Cat. #588

Hotoke Gozen

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, December 25, 1885

IHL Cat. #866

Hotoke Gozen

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, December 25, 1885

IHL Cat. #963

Aoto Fujitsuna

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

December 1885

IHL Cat. #615

Aoto Fujitsuna

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

December 1885

IHL Cat. #1167

Shizuka Gozen

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, December 25, 1885

IHL Cat. #676

Shizuka Gozen

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, December 25, 1885

IHL Cat. #757

Murakami Yoshiteru

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, December 25, 1885

IHL Cat. #1032

Chōdensu

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

1886

IHL Cat. #952

Emperor Takakura's Palace Servants

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, 1886

IHL Cat. #1070

Dainagon Yukinari

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, 1886

IHL Cat. #1402

Akazome Emon

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, September 1886

IHL Cat. #1295

Tanaka Tsurukichi

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition, February 1889

IHL Cat. #758

Mōri Shōjumaru

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

April 1889

IHL Cat. #964

The Soga Brothers

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

April 1889

IHL Cat. #622

The Soga Brothers

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

October 1885

IHL Cat. #1352

The Soga Brothers

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition

(re-issue), 1902

IHL Cat. #600

Dainagon Yukinari

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition

(re-issue), 1902

IHL Cat. #601

Murakami Yoshiteru

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition

(re-issue), 1902

IHL Cat. #2171

Chōdensu

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition

(re-issue), 1902

IHL Cat. #2172