Utagawa Yoshiiku (1833-1904)
Utagawa Yoshiiku (1833-1904)

Shashinkyo daizo zu (Camera view: picture of a large elephant), 1861

Details
Utagawa Yoshiiku (1833-1904)
Shashinkyo daizo zu (Camera view: picture of a large elephant), 1861
Signed Keisai Yoshiiku ga and published by Kagiya Shobei--good impression, slightly faded, worming lower right margin
oban tate-e: 36.3 x 24cm.

Lot Essay

Elephants were not native to Japan and yet they have long been depicted in art, if fancifully. According to the art historian David Waterhouse, a male and female elephant arrived in Nagasaki in 1728. The male alone was brought to Kyoto the following year, where it was shown to both the emperor and the ex-emperor; and to Edo, where the shogun Yoshimune saw it. Afterwards it was kept, first at the Hama Detached Palace and later at a special elephant house in Nakano, where it was on public view. It died in 1742 and its skeleton was displayed at the Hosenji Temple in Nakano along with a wooden seated image of the ninth-century monk Kobo Daishi. The next elephant arrived from Ceylon, probably on a Dutch ship, and was paraded around Nagasaki. In 1863 another elephant came from Southeast Asia to Yokohama, generating prints such as this example. The next one arrived in 1886-87, with an Italian circus. Not to mention the ill-fated Bengal elephant Chunee (d.1826), who came to London in 1809, appeared in pantomine at Covent Garden, but ran amok in his cage and perished before a firing squad.

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