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Women with Performing Monkeys


見立て美人猿回し
Utagawa Toyokuni I (Japanese, 1769–1825)
Publisher: Wakasaya Yoichi (Jakurindô) (Japanese)
Japanese
Edo period

Medium/Technique Woodblock print (nishiki-e); ink and color on paper
Dimensions Vertical ôban triptych; 35.6 x 73.7 cm (14 x 29 in.)
Credit Line Museum of Fine Arts, Boston—Worcester Art Museum exchange, made possible through the Special Korean Pottery Fund, Museum purchase with funds donated by contribution, and Smithsonian Institution—Chinese Expedition, 1923–24
Accession Number54.211-3
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPrints

Monkey trainers were among the many kinds of itinerant performers who could be hired to entertain a crowd on the street or a party at a private home. In real life, monkey trainers were poor, plainly dressed, and usually male. But in this imaginary scene, they are beautiful young ladies in elegant long-sleeved kimono. The well-trained monkeys are enacting a scene from the famous Kabuki play Sukeroku. From left to right, they represent the commoner hero Sukeroku; his sweetheart, the courtesan Agemaki; and his rival, the villainous samurai Hige no Ikyü.

DescriptionTriptych: 54.211 (left), 54.212 (center), 54.213 (right)
Signed Toyokuni ga
豊国画
Provenance1954, by exchange from Worcester Art Museum to the MFA. (Accession Date: April 8, 1954)