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鳳凰城陥落 (精鋭ナル我群占領スル台湾澎湖嶋ヲ之図)
The Fall of Fenghuangcheng, later called Our Elite Forces Capturing the Pescadores Islands in Taiwan (Seiei naru waga gun Taiwan Hôkotô o senryô suru no zu)
鳳凰城陥落 (精鋭ナル我群占領スル台湾澎湖嶋ヲ之図)
Japanese
Meiji era
1894 (Meiji 27), December
Medium/Technique
Woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
Dimensions
Vertical ôban triptych; 37.6 × 74.3 cm (14 13/16 × 29 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Anonymous gift
Accession NumberRES.23.264-6
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsAsia, Prints and Drawings
ClassificationsPrints
Catalogue Raisonné
Hu et al, Conflicts of Interest (St. Louis exh. cat., 2016), #57; Virgin et al., Japan at the Dawn of the Modern Age (MFA, 2001), #58, photo p. 107; Swinton, In Battle's Light (Worcester, 1991), #25; Asai, Kinsei nishiki-e sesôshi 8 (1936), pp. 40-1
DescriptionTriptych (lacks inscribed title seen on other impressions): RES.23.264 (left), RES.23.265 (center), RES.23.266 (right)
MFA impressions, with title: 2000.422a-c, RES.27.167a-c
MFA impressions, without title: 21.1777-9, RES.23.264-6
Rhiannon Paget, in Hu et al. 2016, points out that the 1894 date in the left margin actually predates the occupation of the Pescadores in 1895 and suggestes that the first edition of the print may have been the untitled version, which is very similar to a scene identified as Fenghuangcheng in a board game designed by Kiyochika in 1894. Apparently the blocks were recycled for a second edition, with a new title, in 1895.
MFA impressions, with title: 2000.422a-c, RES.27.167a-c
MFA impressions, without title: 21.1777-9, RES.23.264-6
Rhiannon Paget, in Hu et al. 2016, points out that the 1894 date in the left margin actually predates the occupation of the Pescadores in 1895 and suggestes that the first edition of the print may have been the untitled version, which is very similar to a scene identified as Fenghuangcheng in a board game designed by Kiyochika in 1894. Apparently the blocks were recycled for a second edition, with a new title, in 1895.
Signed
Kiyochika
清親
清親
Marks
Artist's seal: Kiyo
Inscriptions
ProvenanceAnonymous gift in memory of Horatio G. Curtis