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Ueno koen chi hakurankai on kaigyo zu, jō (The Opening of the First National Industrial Exposition at Ueno Park I, Tokyo)
Ueno koen chi hakurankai on kaigyo zu, jō (The Opening of the First National Industrial Exposition at Ueno Park I, Tokyo)
Ueno koen chi hakurankai on kaigyo zu, jō (The Opening of the First National Industrial Exposition at Ueno Park I, Tokyo)

Ueno koen chi hakurankai on kaigyo zu, jō (The Opening of the First National Industrial Exposition at Ueno Park I, Tokyo)

Date1877, 8th month
MediumColor woodblock print
Dimensions14 x 19 1/4 in. (35.6 x 48.9 cm)
Credit LineGift of Dr. and Mrs. Herman Pines in honor of Dr. Julius Steiglitz
Object number1989.14o.1-3
Terms
  • triptych
  • industrialization
  • urban landscape
  • industrial exposition
  • Japanese
  • Late Edo
  • Meiji
Object TypePrints
On View
Not on view
In 19th-century Europe the organic chemical industry made possible the synthesis of water-soluble aniline dyes. At first used to dye cloth, the affordable yet intense colors soon found their way into the studios of Japanese printmakers, where they were applied to all genres of print. The new Western colors became synonymous with celebratory depictions of the new social and political landscape in Meiji-period Japan. This album epitomizes the association of bright colors with the pageantry and building projects of the new regime.

Resource: Chelsea Foxwell and Anne Leonard, Awash in Color: French and Japanese Prints, exh. cat. (Chicago: Smart Museum of Art, 2012), p. 30.
Naikoku kangyō hakurankai no zu (National Industrial Exhibition)
Kobayashi Kiyochika (小林清親)
1877, 8th or 9th month
Nikkōsan go honsha ichiranzu (View of the Royal Honsha in Nikkosan)
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (月岡芳年)
1882, 2nd month
Shôki and gaki
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (月岡芳年)
late 19th century
Utekisei
Kobayashi Taigen
n.d.