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Peonies


牡丹
Utagawa Hiroshige I (Japanese, 1797–1858)
Japanese
Edo period
1853 (Kaei 6), 2nd month

Medium/Technique Woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
Dimensions Uchiwa-e on horizontal aiban sheet; 21.9 x 27 cm (8 5/8 x 10 2/3 in.)
Credit Line Asiatic Curator's Fund
Accession Number53.438
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPrints
The most spectacular mid-summer flower in Japan was the tree peony, originally imported from China as a medicinal plant. (The tree peony is the official national flower of modern China.) By the Edo period, when htis print was made, peonies had been cultivated in Japan for almost a thousand years and were greatly admired for their blossoms. Peonies frequently appeared in textile designs and accessories such as this printed fan, intended to be cut out and pasted to a bamboo framework.

Catalogue Raisonné Menegazzo, Hiroshige: Visioni dal Giappone (2018), #III.21
DescriptionUnidentified publisher's mark.
Signed Hiroshige ga
広重画
Marks Censors' seals: Fuku, Muramatsu, Ox 2
No blockcutter's mark
改印:福、村松、丑弐
彫師:なし
Provenance1953, sold by Warren E. Cox and Associates, New York, to the MFA. (Accession Date: May 14, 1953)