Mizuno Toshikata

Undated photo of the artist

Mizuno Toshikata 水野年方 (1866-1908) 

BIOGRAPHY

Sources: : Artelino website http://www.artelino.com/forum/artists.asp?act=&art=132&alp=g&cay=1&cp=1&sea=&tie=Ginko%20Adachi%20active%201874-1897 [page not active 11-14-23]; Guide to Modern Japanese Woodblock Prints: 1900-1975, Helen Merritt, University of Hawaii Press, 1992; The Sino-Japanese War, Nathan Chaikin, self-published, 1983, pg. 36; Imperial Japan: The Art of the Meiji Era (1868-1912), Frederick Baekeland, Herbert F Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, 1980, p. 136; The World of the Meiji Print: Impressions of a New Civilization, Julia Meech-Pekarik, Weatherhill, 1986, p. 220-221; The Hotei Encyclopedia of Japanese Woodblock Prints, Amy Reigle Newland, Hotei Publishing Company, 2005, p. 251, 253; International Fine Print Dealers Association website http://www.printdealers.com/content/node/2225 [page not active 11-14-23]; Woodblock Kuchi-e Prints: Reflections of Meiji Culture, Helen Merritt and Nanako Yamada, University of Hawaii Press, 2000, p. 209-210 and as footnoted.


Toshikata was born Mizuno Kumajirō in 1866 in the Yamamoto-chō in the Kanda district of Tokyo to a plasterer's family. When he was about thirteen years old his father, Nonaka Kichigoro, sent him to study with Yoshitoshi Tsukioka (1839-1892), but his father removed him from Yoshitoshi's studio and sent him to a relative of his mother to earn his living as a painter of ceramics.1 In 1882, however, he returned to Yoshitoshi's studio. Yoshitoshi would give him the character toshi (年 or its variant 秊) from his own name as the first character of his art name Toshikata and eventually designate him as his successor. Yoshitoshi is also said to have passed his artist seals along to Toshikata2. He also apprenticed for a time with the ceramic painter Yamada Ryūtō and studied traditional Japanese painting (nanga) with Shibata Hōshū and Watanabe Shōtei (aka Watanabe Seitei, 1851-1918). 


In 1887, on Yoshitoshi's recommendation, he succeeded Yoshitoshi as the illustrator at the newspaper Yamato shimbun, where he achieved acclaim. He worked at the Yamato shimbum until 1894. During the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), which brought about a brief resurgence of woodblock printmaking, he created a large body of work depicting battle scenes.  His work is some of the best to be produced during that period. 

He was active as a painter of genre and historical subjects, receiving awards of merit in 1898, 1899, 1900 and 1902 at the joint Japan Art Institute/Japan Painting Association (Nihon Bijutsuin/Nihon Kaiga Kyokai) exhibition and was active in the Japan Art Society (Nihon Bijutsu Kyōkai), and the Japan Painting Society (Nihon Kaiga Kyōkai) and the Academy of Japanese Art (Nippon Bijutsuin).


As times became difficult for Japanese printmakers, with ukiyo-e printmaking falling out of style due to the introduction of photography and lithography, Toshikata turned toward the design of illustrations for novels (kuchi-e), literary journals, such as Bungei kurabu, Miyako no hana (Flower of the capital) and Shin shosetsu (New novel), and the design of fashion plates for department stores, such as the series Mitsukoshi: Brocades of the Capital (Mitsukoshi miyako no nishiki, 1905-6), which advertised Meiji fashions for the Mitsui Department Store. 


Toshikata published a number of series of bijin prints and genre scenes, featuring women and children, including print sets such as Thirty-six Types of Beauty (Sanjurokkasen), 1891, published by Kokkedio and Ancient Beauties (Kodai bijin).  Sato Shotaro and Akiyama Buemon were two of his main publishers. After the turn of the century, Toshikata remained a well-known painter, printmaker and illustrator and is credited with raising the status of painters from the ukiyo-e lineage.


Toshikata's role as a teacher is significant.  His students Kaburaki Kiyokata (1878-1972), Ikeda Terukata (1883-1921) and Ikeda Shōen (1888-1917) are known today as successful Nihonga bijinga painters and print designers. He also had a number of women students, including his wife, Mizuno Hidekata (nee Ichikawa), and Ikeda Shōen. 


He was demanding of his students and did not encourage freedom of expression. Although he cared deeply about the status of ukiyo-e, his heart was in historical painting. As a young man he lived in Kanda and studied tokiwazu, the shamisen music that accompanied joruri (a type of sung narrative with shamisen accompaniment, typically found in bunraku, a traditional Japanese puppet theater) performance.  In 1895, having achieved some success as a painter he moved to Yanaka Shimizu-cho. In his new home he practiced archery, yokyoku (noh chanting), and the game of go, all avocations related to historical painting. He died in April 1908 at age forty-two, reportedly from overwork.


1 The New Wave: Twentieth-century Japanese prints from the Robert O. Muller Collection, Amy Reigle Stephens, Bamboo Publishing Ltd, London & Hotei-Japanese Prints, Leiden, 1993, p. 92.

2 Yoshitoshi's One Hundred Aspects of the Moon, John Stevenson, Hotei Publishing, 2001. p. 36.

The Artist's Signatures and Seals (a sampling)

Notes: 応需 ōju [by request] 

応需年方画

ōju Toshikata ga

unread seal

應需年方絵

ōju Toshikata-e

年方

 sealed Toshikata, 1895

應需年方絵

ōju Toshikata-e

 with Toshikata-e seal, 1895

應需年方絵

ōju Toshikata-e

with Ōsai seal, 1895

応需年方

ōju Toshikata

応斎年方

Ōsai Toshikata seal

応需年方絵

ōju

Toshikata-e

年方

Toshikata with Shosetsu-Toshikata seal

年方

Toshikata

応需

sealed Ōsai

年方

Toshikata

応需

sealed Ōsai

年方

Toshikata

年方 Toshikata seal

年方

Toshikata

年方 Toshikata seal

年方

Toshikata

年方 Toshikata seal

応需年方

ōju Toshikata

年方

sealed Toshikata

應需年方絵

ōju Toshikata-e

蕉雪

sealed Shō and Setsu

年方

Toshikata seal


年方

Toshikata

年方

Toshikata

応斎 年方

sealed Ōsai and Toshikata

年方

Toshikata

年方蕉雪

sealed Toshikata and Shōsetsu

last updated:11-14-2023

Prints in Collection

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

click on thumbnail for print details

Reform/rectify the ruler’s errors with tactful humor from the series Brocade Pictures for Moral Education, 1883-84

IHL Cat. #431

Rough Tales of the Floating World told on Eastern Brocades: Sekiguchi Yatarō, Araki Mataemon, Kimura Matazō, Musashibō Benkei, c. 1883/1890

IHL Cat. #1981

Kojima Takanori

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

August 1888

IHL Cat. #1403

Yamanouchi Kazutoyo no tsuma from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

August 1888

IHL Cat. #599

Kusunoki Masashige

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

August 1888

IHL Cat. #965

Nawa Nagatoshi

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition, August 1888

IHL Cat. #2084

Katagiri Shōichi

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

October 1888

IHL Cat. #1033

IHL Cat. #1034

 Arai Hakuseki

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

 November 1888

IHL Cat. #841

Yasaku, A Dutiful Son

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

June 1889

IHL Cat. #478

Ōishi Yoshio

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

July 1890

IHL Cat. #951

Takayama Hikokurō

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

September 1890

IHL Cat. #1294

Kido Suikōin

from the series Instructive

Models of Lofty Ambition,

October 1890

IHL Cat. #1031


Sanjō Sanetomi

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition,

November 1890

IHL Cat. #1035

Hanawa Hokiichi

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition, November 1890

IHL Cat. #1296

Takasugi Shinsaku

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition, November 1890

IHL Cat. #1399

Sano Tsuneyo

from the series Instructive Models of Lofty Ambition, November 1890

IHl Cat. #1400

New Year Charm in the Shape of a Love Letter: Woman of the Genroku Era

from the series

Thirty-six Elegant Selections, 1892

IHL Cat. #995

Shiohi: Women of the Bunka Era from the series

Thirty-Six Elegant Selections, 1893

IHL Cat. #666

  Ban-Banzai for the Great Japanese Empire! Illustration of the Assault on Songhwan: A Great Victory for Our Troops, 1894

IHL Cat. #89

Harada Jukichi Opens the Genbu Gate from Within the Fort at Pyongyan,

1894

IHL Cat. #93

The Great Battle of the Ansong Ford: The Valor of Captain Matsuzaki Crossing Anjo, 1894

IHL Cat. #168

Captain Matsuzaki Crossing the Anjō-sen, c. 1894

IHL Cat. #530

Naval Officers Discussing the Battle Strategy for the Invasion of China, 1894

IHL Cat. #444

Captain Higuchi, 1895

IHL Cat. #1343

Bijin showing a folding screen to a reclining man, c. 1896

IHL Cat. #1713