Abalone Divers off the Coast of Ise, from an Untitled Landscape Series, early 1830s. Creator: Yamaguchiya Tobei (Japanese); Utagawa Kunisada (Japanese, 1786-1865).
Sujet

Abalone Divers off the Coast of Ise, from an Untitled Landscape Series, early 1830s. Creator: Yamaguchiya Tobei (Japanese); Utagawa Kunisada (Japanese, 1786-1865).

Légende

Abalone Divers off the Coast of Ise, from an Untitled Landscape Series, early 1830s. Prolific printmaker Utagawa Kunisada produced this seascape of abalone fishing as part of a series of untitled landscape prints in the early Tenpo era (1830-44). In the coastal city of Ise on Japan?s main island of Honshu, female divers called ama traditionally did the physically demanding job of harvesting shellfish such as abalone. These marine snails are valuable for their edible flesh, and their iridescent inner shell is a source of mother-of-pearl. This print depicts three stages of the harvest: One diver plunges into the water, another holds her breath while prying an abalone off the rocks with a blade, and a third ama conveys her successful harvest to the beaming fishermen on the boat.

Date

0

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images/Heritage Art

Notre référence

HRM19F68_259

Model release

NA

Property release

NA

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

113,9Mo (6,2Mo) / 64,9cm x 44,0cm / 7667 x 5193 (300dpi)

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