Fumi no kiyogaki thumbnail 1
Fumi no kiyogaki thumbnail 2
Not currently on display at the V&A

Fumi no kiyogaki

Woodblock Print
1801 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

From 1639 to 1853 the Dutch were the only Europeans allowed to trade in Japan. They were confined to a small artificial island in Nagasaki Harbour and their activities were closely regulated by the Japanese. No European women were allowed in Japan, but the Dutch were permitted to enjoy the company of local courtesans.

This erotic print shows a Dutchman with a Japanese woman. The man is speaking gibberish and the woman is complaining that she cannot understand what he is saying. Instead she urges him to ‘do it harder’. Incense is burning in the lower right-hand corner, perhaps to mask the smell of the western ‘barbarian’. The print reveals a humorous, rather libidinous dimension to the Japanese curiosity about the Dutch.


Object details

Category
Object type
Titles
  • Fumi no kiyogaki (series title)
  • 'Neat version of a love letter' or 'Pure drawings of female beauty' (alternative title)
Materials and techniques
Colour print from woodblocks
Brief description
Pap, Japan, prints
Physical description
Japanese erotic print (shunga) showing a courtesan having sex with a European merchant at an open window in the Dutch settlement on the island of Dejima in Nagasaki Harbour
Dimensions
  • Height: 25cm
  • Width: 37cm
Style
Summary
From 1639 to 1853 the Dutch were the only Europeans allowed to trade in Japan. They were confined to a small artificial island in Nagasaki Harbour and their activities were closely regulated by the Japanese. No European women were allowed in Japan, but the Dutch were permitted to enjoy the company of local courtesans.

This erotic print shows a Dutchman with a Japanese woman. The man is speaking gibberish and the woman is complaining that she cannot understand what he is saying. Instead she urges him to ‘do it harder’. Incense is burning in the lower right-hand corner, perhaps to mask the smell of the western ‘barbarian’. The print reveals a humorous, rather libidinous dimension to the Japanese curiosity about the Dutch.
Collection
Accession number
E.170-1954

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Record createdFebruary 7, 2005
Record URL
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