Itō Nisaburō

Ito, Nizaburo 1905-2001

Self Portrait, 1927

pigment on canvas/framed

J00725-001

The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto

Itō Nisaburō 伊藤仁三郎 (1905-2001)1 


BIOGRAPHY

The artist Itō Nisaburō (also written Nizaburō), best known for the shin hanga woodblock prints he designed for the prolific Kyoto publishing house Uchida Publishing, was also a talented painter in a style that combined Western yōga and Japanese nihonga painting techniques.  


Born into a merchant family in Kyoto in 1905, he attended the Kyoto City Specialist School of Painting2, graduating in 1927 (the year he painted the self-portrait shown on the left) and subsequently studied at the Sannanjuku (Mountain-South-Studio) of the nihonga style painter Tsuchida Bakusen 土田麦僊 (1887-1936). Joining with other former students of Bakusen, he formed the Hakushūsha group in 1938 which held exhibitions in major Japanese cities.

His post-WWII painting has been described as exhibiting the "uninhibited brushwork of zen painting, followed by a period when he was influenced by surrealism..."  In the mid-1960s he was to create works inspired by Tibetan Buddhism and his work was to increasingly display an "esoteric, mystical tone." 


In addition to creating quite a few prints for Uchida, he also worked with the print publishing company Matsukyū, established by the Kyoto artist Tokuriki Tomikichirō (1902-2000), and may have self-published several woodblock prints.  It is not known if Nisaburō carved any of the blocks for his prints.  His print designs are occasionally confused with those of his fellow Kyoto print designers Kotozuka Eiichi (1906-1979) and Tokuriki Tomikichirō (1902-2000). 

The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto lists 152 of his works as part of their collection3 and in 2005 the Chikkyō Art Museum (Kasaoka City) held a retrospective of his 80-year painting career. 

A Few of the Artist's Prints - for reference only and not part of this collection

untitled

early showa period

woodcut on paper

P01200-001

The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto

Kiyomizu Temple,

c. 1950s

Publisher: Matsukyū

Artelino archive website

Ariyama Hot Springs,

c. 1950s

Publisher: Uchida

Artelino archive website

Cherry Blossom at Omuro,

c. 1950s

Publisher: Uchida

Artelino archive website

1 Note that Merritt in Guide to Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: 1900-1975, gives the artist's birth and death years as 1910-1988.  The years 1905-2001 are given by the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto and by the Chikkyō Art Museum which held an exhibition of his work in 2005.

2 Also known as the Kyoto Municipal School of Arts and Crafts (now Kyoto City Dohda Senior High School of Arts)

3 See their holdings at http://search.artmuseums.go.jp/search_e/sakuhin_list.php?sakka=3031

Samples of Signatures and Seals of the Artist

仁三郎画

Nisaburō ga

仁三郎

Nisaburō with

"ni" seal 仁

unread seal

unread seal

unread seal

unread seal

"ni" seal 仁

"ni" seal 仁

nj?

unread seal

"ni"  仁 or "nisa"  二三 seal  

Prints in Collection

click on thumbnail for print details

Sarusawa Pond, 1960/1969

IHL Cat. #2009

Stone Lantern at Kasuga Shrine, 1960/1970

IHL Cat. #2636

Arashiyama, Spring Scenery,

c. 1960/1969

IHL Cat. #786

Yasaka Pagoda, Moonlit Night,

c. 1960/1969

IHL Cat. #787

Rakusei Saihō-ji, undated

IHL Cat. #2030

Kurobe Gorge, after 1963

(set of six postcards)

IHL Cat. #2529

Tōjinbō, c. 1960s

(set of six postcards)

IHL Cat. #2530