Asianart.com | Associations | Articles | Exhibitions | Galleries | Message Board | Calendar


Asian Art Calendar of Events

Friday, March 29, 2024


Exhibition Public - USA & Canada

Important Japanese Prints from the Collection of Henry Steiner

Sebastian Izzard LLCAsian Art
17 E. 76 St., 3rd Fl.,
New York, New York, USA
Mar 17, 2018 To Mar 29, 2018


Detail: Golden Age of Japanese Woodblock Prints as Seen and Collected by
Internationally Recognized Graphic Designer and Self-Proclaimed Art Addict

Sixty-two Japanese prints and one color woodblock album spanning nearly 150 years—from ca. 1710 to 1857—will go on view this March in an exhibition at Sebastian Izzard Asian Art in New York City. The works range from beauty prints by Kitagawa Utamaro, and actor prints by Tōshūsai Sharaku to Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic Great Wave. They were collected by Henry Steiner, the distinguished Hong Kong-based graphic designer, whose many corporate clients have included HSBC, for which he designed the iconic red and white hexagonal logo in 1983. The exhibition will be on view from March 17 to 29, 2018 during New York City’s Asia Week.


About the Collector

Henry Steiner (b. 1934, Vienna, Austria), emigrated in 1939 with his family to New York to avoid Nazi persecution. After receiving an MFA from Yale University, he worked for a year in New York City in advertising and design during the Mad Men era. He studied art independently in Paris for two years and, after returning briefly to New York, undertook freelance art design work for a Hong Kong publication. He soon moved to that city and in 1964 established Steiner & Co., a graphic design and brand consulting company.

Steiner began collecting in 1974, with works from the legendary collection of Henry Vever, and was most active in the 1970s and 1980s. He continued collecting until 2012. In an essay included in the exhibition catalogue, Brief History of an Addiction, Steiner writes that prints of 18th and 19th century Japan had “technical refinement unknown in the West” and that “ukiyo-e have a verve, a raucous humanity, combined with an unparalleled sensitivity of coloring.”

In the essay, Steiner writes, “I prudently kept my prints in a large box in a cold bank vault. Many friends questioned this strange practice.... I preferred keeping them safely away from fading and the Hong Kong humidity, with the occasional custodial visit.” Describing his visits to the vault as “rituals,” he recalled, “Unlocking the vault door and inhaling the slight, organic scent of the paper, opening the folders and fondly seeing the familiar images – feeling the imaginary equivalent of mild sunlight on my face – was always an example of what, to me, is the sense of cultural nobility such art confers upon their aficionados.”

Concluding his essay, Steiner writes, “A few months ago, I decided it was time to let my visual darlings travel to new homes and to have this catalogue as a souvenir. I entrust them (in the words of my collector predecessor Edmond de Goncourt) to the inheritors of my taste.”


Subjects

Among Steiner’s interests were prints of “billboard girls” – women who became part of the brand of shops in Japan and were to Edo period Japan what Twiggy was to the 1960s or the Kardashians in our time. Ohisa was the eldest daughter of Takashima Chōbei, an official purveyor of Japanese rice crackers (sembei) to the shogunate. In Ohisa of the Takashimaya, by Utagawa Toyokuni, she is portrayed wearing an elaborately printed cotton sash and holding in one hand a porcelain teacup on a black lacquer saucer. In the other she holds a paper fan decorated with a wave design and the red triple oak-leaf crest of her family’s shop.

Kitagawa Utamaro’s Sheltering from the Rain, circa 1799, is a triptych that comments on nature and the insignificance of class distinctions: peasants and wealthy merchants alike seek the shelter of trees during a sudden rainstorm. (A print on the same theme, Anthropomorphic Animals Sheltering from the Rain, circa 1844, by Utagawa Kuniyoshi, shows among its colorful menagerie of animal-headed figures a cat hawking rat poison.)

Superstition and tradition were and remain important in Japanese culture. Suzuki Harunobu’s
1765 Beauty Leaping Off the Balcony of Kiyomizu Temple, in Kyoto, shows a young woman floating in space, having leapt off the temple’s balcony, a practice that would foretell the prospects of a marriage: if she landed safely, using a paper umbrella as a parachute, the marriage would succeed, and if not, the marriage would fail.
Hokusai’s In the Hollow of the Wave off Kanagawa, with nature’s overwhelming power and permanence contrasting with the ephemeral lives of fishermen slim fishing boats, will also be on view. Prices for this print range from the tens of thousands of dollars up to nearly $950,000 at auction for a simple reason: during Hokusai’s lifetime over 8,000 images may have been made from the woodblocks, leading to the deterioration of the plates and, naturally, the prints pulled off them. The impression on view is one of the earliest surviving impressions.

Chōkyōsai Eiri (active 1789–1801) is represented by two rare prints, including a triptych, Beautiful Streetwalkers from the Three Capitals, which is known in only one other impression. With no hint of sarcasm or mockery, Eiri magically transformed the streetwalkers into exquisite, elegantly clad, willowy figures.


Additional Highlights

A superb group of prints by Suzuki Harunobu (1724–1770), including a night scene of a young woman on a veranda admiring plum blossoms by lamp light – a noted masterpiece known in only three impressions.

Eleven works by Kitagawa Utamaro (1753–1806), a personal favorite of the collector. These include a fine first printing of the “Shell Book,” described by Japanese print historian Roger Keyes as “one of the most beautiful books ever published,” along with a fine group of yellow ground prints of “beauties,” or very attractive women.

Utamaro’s Courtesan and Her Guest Beneath a Mosquito Net, ca. 1800, a technical tour de force. A young woman has lifted mosquito netting as her lover smokes a pipe within. A tender and beautifully composed moment, the virtuosity of the netting is breathtaking; by the use of line alone, Utamaro shows not only the texture of the fabric but manages to convey the folds of the netting as the woman lifts it.

Among seven works by the enigmatic artist Tōshūsai Sharaku (active 1794–95), is his portrait of Ichikawa Ebizō IV as the tragic Nō master Takemura Sadanoshin, once in the collection of the famous French collector Charles Havilland. It is one of the most desirable designs from this artist’s oeuvre.

Several works by Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858), including Sudden Shower Over Shin-Ōhashi Bridge and Atake (1857), one of the artist’s masterpieces for its skewed, off-center composition and the angles of the bridge and shoreline beyond.

Important Japanese Prints from the Collection of Henry Steiner will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, with an essay by Steiner on his collecting, Brief History of an Addiction, and catalogue notes about each of the prints by Sebastian Izzard.

Phone No.: 212.794.1522
Contact Name: Kathryn Williamson
Contact Email: [email protected]
Site URL: http://https://www.izzardasianart.com/

Kitagawa Utamaro (1754–1806), The Hour of the Horse (12 pm)
Kitagawa Utamaro (1754–1806), The Hour of the Horse (12 pm)
Japan
Edo, circa 1794–95
15 x 10⅛ in. (38.1 x 25.7 cm)
Color woodblock print, yellow ground
The “Hour of the Horse” was around midday and two women, dressed appropriately in light cotton robes, appear to have just finished visiting the bathhouse. One, seen three-quarter length, dries her neck with her towel, the other, with a bran bag used to clean skin held in her mouth, crouches as she wrings out a cloth. The inscription translates as: In olden times the women’s bath as shown in this picture took place at the hour of the Monkey [4 pm]. The blind-printing technique used in this print for the outline of the women’s faces is very unusual. Utamaro was quite experimental at this time, and perhaps used the lack of outline as a way of expressing the curve of the face. On other occasions he employs a purple color for the facial features rather than black, perhaps as a method to soften the line.

Asianart.com | Associations | Articles | Exhibitions | Galleries | Message Board | Calendar