Not on display

Picture Book of Places of Entertainment in the Eastern capital

Book
1802 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

After 1639 the Dutch were the only Europeans allowed to trade in Japan and they were confined to a small artificial island in Nagasaki Harbour. They were, however, accorded the honour of regular audiences with the shogun and once a year would travel the long journey to his castle in Edo (modern Tokyo). There they would stay in a lodging house known as the Nagasaki-ya. This famous image by Hokusai shows the excitement they aroused among the local residents, who gathered round the Nagasaki-ya eager for a glimpse of the strange Europeans.
The other pages in the book show places in and around the capital (Edo), amongst others a depiction of a dye house.

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Object details

Category
Object type
Titles
  • Picture Book of Places of Entertainment in the Eastern capital (assigned by artist)
  • Ehon Azuma Asobi (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Colour printed from woodblocks
Brief description
Pap, Japan, prints
Physical description
Woodblock printed book by Hokusai depicting places in and around the capital (Edo); it contains the famous image of crowds gathering to look at the Dutch in the Nagasaki-ya.
Style
Gallery label
The areas along the banks of the Kanda River in Edo (Tokyo) became the city’s textile dyeing quarter and a hub for the production of fashion products. The right-hand page shows a dyer hanging out a length of purple-dyed cloth. The left-hand page shows the manufacture of ceramic tiles in the Imado district of Asakusa.
Summary
After 1639 the Dutch were the only Europeans allowed to trade in Japan and they were confined to a small artificial island in Nagasaki Harbour. They were, however, accorded the honour of regular audiences with the shogun and once a year would travel the long journey to his castle in Edo (modern Tokyo). There they would stay in a lodging house known as the Nagasaki-ya. This famous image by Hokusai shows the excitement they aroused among the local residents, who gathered round the Nagasaki-ya eager for a glimpse of the strange Europeans.
The other pages in the book show places in and around the capital (Edo), amongst others a depiction of a dye house.
Collection
Accession number
E.2675-1925

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Record createdFebruary 7, 2005
Record URL
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